rockvillespeed said:
no!!
dry systems function by bleeding off a very small portion of the n2o hit thru a regulator, this bumps up the fuel pressure - much like an fmu on a common centrifugal supercharger kit does.
this provides the extra fuel needed, thru the oem injectors, port to port, no distribution troubles.
but, bear in mind, fuel pump output drops with pressure increses - so, killer pump is mandatory.
Just wanted to provide some info regarding this...
On a stock injector truck, 5 psi of fuel pressure will enrich things by about
0.1 AFR . 10 psi will get you 0.2 AFR, maybe a bit more. This was checked
on a number of different trucks with different Wide-Band o2s, and they
all end up being about the same.
A 30-50 shot of spray will need a 1.0-2.0 AFR bump or more, which means
you'd need a lot of fuel pressure (10x the above) to get things to where they need to be. In practical application, you can't get stock injectors
to gain more than 0.4-0.5 AFR via fuel pressure changes... you run into
excessively high FPs that dead-head the pump.
Personally, I think spraying a truck with stock rods/pistons is asking
for trouble. In the 10 years I've been dealing with Sy/Tys, I have yet
to hear of a successful use of spray over a long period of time. (ie >
than 2-3 races)
I'm of the mind that the only way to do it successfully is to have the ECM
know about the % of NOS being sprayed, and adjust the fuel accordingly.
Any knock retard that showed up could shut off the solenoid, and keep
the motor alive. The ECM could even run the NOS, making it progressive
throughout the run.
Just my thoughts,
Dig
'91 Sy - 11.83 @ 114 |20g/converter.