I have installed the one that I see advertised for the Weber carbs - but mine is twisting etc.
Has anyone found anything different?
I am going to change out my carb for the Weber DFEV - but hoped to get something more substantial on it.
1970 Spider
Is there a more substantial air cleaner for single carb?
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Re: Is there a more substantial air cleaner for single carb?
with some minor mods with a dremel tool you can retain your stock air cleaner
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Re: Is there a more substantial air cleaner for single carb?
Thank you very much Mark.
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- Your car is a: 1975 124 Spider
- Location: Oregon Coast
Re: Is there a more substantial air cleaner for single carb?
I've always wondered why FI car owners always search out cold air, while carb guys tend to be OK with the smallest filters right on top of the carbs.
I would guess that the coolest air with the least resistance would be best for carbs as well as FI, right?
I would guess that the coolest air with the least resistance would be best for carbs as well as FI, right?
FOR SALE: 1975 124 Spider http://fiatspider.com/f15/viewtopic.php?f=10&t=34477
- bradartigue
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- Location: Atlanta, GA
Re: Is there a more substantial air cleaner for single carb?
Cool dry air is wonderful....707kevin wrote:I've always wondered why FI car owners always search out cold air, while carb guys tend to be OK with the smallest filters right on top of the carbs.
I would guess that the coolest air with the least resistance would be best for carbs as well as FI, right?
On the FI (CS0) cars air enters through a box with a snorkle oriented to the cool outside air, though some owners put those K&N cone things on the hot side of the motor "for performance."
I think the small air filter thing on carbs is just because that's what people sell. A far better solution are those remote air filter things make for Webers, where a housing without a filter mounts to the top of the carb, then to a hose connected to a filter box on the cold side. While nifty it's pretty hard to make this work on some Spiders; early CS2 model 2000's even with good modifications are simply congested on both sides of the engine bay; routing a big old snorkle around and locating a remote air box is a bitch.
1970 124 Spider
http://www.artigue.com/fiat
http://www.artigue.com/fiat
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Re: Is there a more substantial air cleaner for single carb?
That's sort of what I figured - working with whats available in the space available.
I've got 4' x 6' x 1/8" sheet of aluminum someone gave me and I need an excuse to start making things...
I've got 4' x 6' x 1/8" sheet of aluminum someone gave me and I need an excuse to start making things...
FOR SALE: 1975 124 Spider http://fiatspider.com/f15/viewtopic.php?f=10&t=34477
- toplessexpat
- Posts: 1183
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- Your car is a: 1976 Spider 1800
- Location: Houston, TX
Re: Is there a more substantial air cleaner for single carb?
Agree with the above.... Only extra is that many of the K&N setups also come with a snorkel to channel cooler air. There's also an enclosed filter "Apollo??" that you can duct cool air direct to.
One of our members (sptcoupe) has built a great airbox for the top of his twin 44s. It channels cool air direct from the front of the car to the top of his carbs.
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One of our members (sptcoupe) has built a great airbox for the top of his twin 44s. It channels cool air direct from the front of the car to the top of his carbs.
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Re: Is there a more substantial air cleaner for single carb?
It's all about the air resistance of the material used and the surface area.
cone filters look and sound cool but most of them have less surface area than the stock filter in a fuel injected car.
K&N and other oiled filters have less resistance by nature of being not as effective of a filter.
On my VW i use a Donaldson Powercore filter by way of a Volant intake system, which retains the factory ram air and adds a large scoop behind the headlight. It's both dry and hydrophobic (sheds water), and has more surface area than the stock filter.
It also lets me hear the diverter valve at low speed which is kinda cool.
The engineering isn't quite as elegant as the cyclonic air filter on my land cruiser, which naturally requires somewhere you can put a big round airbox (think round carburetor type airbox, then make it 3x taller) - which was why they stopped using them when they went to the V8 engine in 1998.
Anyway. One option is to use a cone or cylindrical type air filter and build your own enclosure for it. I've seen that done on a TDI Vanagon - using a cylindrical filter for an earth mover or something, in a big can, with plumbing to the intake vent.
cone filters look and sound cool but most of them have less surface area than the stock filter in a fuel injected car.
K&N and other oiled filters have less resistance by nature of being not as effective of a filter.
On my VW i use a Donaldson Powercore filter by way of a Volant intake system, which retains the factory ram air and adds a large scoop behind the headlight. It's both dry and hydrophobic (sheds water), and has more surface area than the stock filter.
It also lets me hear the diverter valve at low speed which is kinda cool.
The engineering isn't quite as elegant as the cyclonic air filter on my land cruiser, which naturally requires somewhere you can put a big round airbox (think round carburetor type airbox, then make it 3x taller) - which was why they stopped using them when they went to the V8 engine in 1998.
Anyway. One option is to use a cone or cylindrical type air filter and build your own enclosure for it. I've seen that done on a TDI Vanagon - using a cylindrical filter for an earth mover or something, in a big can, with plumbing to the intake vent.
- toplessexpat
- Posts: 1183
- Joined: Fri Aug 31, 2012 2:29 am
- Your car is a: 1976 Spider 1800
- Location: Houston, TX
Re: Is there a more substantial air cleaner for single carb?
http://www.knfilters.com/mobile/apollo.htm
If anyone has installed one of these to either a FI or Carb'd car - I'd be interested to hear of their results.
On carbs - you can get a plenum to mount to the top of some of them, allowing you to duct air to it. Has anyone done that?
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If anyone has installed one of these to either a FI or Carb'd car - I'd be interested to hear of their results.
On carbs - you can get a plenum to mount to the top of some of them, allowing you to duct air to it. Has anyone done that?
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