Windstar Intake Clearance - Hitting Hood

For whatever it is worth, I have a Windstar intake I am going to be dyno testing on the '97 that I have. I am planning to do the tests with the hood closed this time, and make it as real world as possible. I do know that the filter element in the Windstar vs stock TJ flows 100 CFM more and closer to what the engine uses at WOT.
 
Is that a fair and accurate portrayal of what is being stated? No one is claiming that the PCM sees excess horsepower being generated and is actively putting an end to that disobedience.

I wasn't trying to point that at you. There are many on this forum that preach that though. I was agreeing with you from a practical perspective for the vast majority of people who might do this mod. The last bit was for them.
 
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For whatever it is worth, I have a Windstar intake I am going to be dyno testing on the '97 that I have. I am planning to do the tests with the hood closed this time, and make it as real world as possible. I do know that the filter element in the Windstar vs stock TJ flows 100 CFM more and closer to what the engine uses at WOT.

This is actually something I'm interested in. How does the older jeeps with a distributor handle all this compared to the newer ones with coil packs? I honestly don't know how the computer, temps and ignition timing work together on these older jeeps.
 
Same(ish) PCM 97-04. I wouldn't be surprised if they tweaked a few parameters over those years, but I doubt they changed anything cosmic.
 
This doesn't really pertain to the OP's original question specifically but seems like a good place to put the info.

Main housing is from a Windstar, and shortened. I've seen some mention the snout being so small on the Windstar, which is true. I think it's something like 2-1/4." So I grabbed a larger Econoline air box and grafted the snout end of the housing onto the Windstar box. That snout is closer to 3", I can't recall exactly. Then the rest of the intake plumbing is full 3" with it necking down to the throttle body with a 3" to 2-5/8" 90°.

The fitment is really tight with the hood down. There wasn't much wiggle room to make it all work. But if I can make this work with this circuitous routing, there's no reason it can't be done with standard throttle body placement. It'll just take some fiddling.

I've got other variables at play here that are giving me some intake temp struggles, but for a stock Jeep I think by far and away the biggest source of heat for IATs is going to be the intake manifold's proximity to the exhaust manifold. I'm planning to pull the intake manifold off in the near future to gold-wrap the bottom of it.

Worth noting the IAT sensor is in the intake manifold in the JTEC era TJs and they moved it to the intake tube in the NGC era TJs. I've moved mine to just below the supercharger.

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Nice work. I was similarly worried, especially about how close the nose of the filter element itself was to to the opening of the shortened filter housing. I basically chopped the opening off and used 3" intercooler piping to get more clearance but I like this better. Didn't even know that Econoline housing was a thing.
 
Nice work. I was similarly worried, especially about how close the nose of the filter element itself was to to the opening of the shortened filter housing. I basically chopped the opening off and used 3" intercooler piping to get more clearance but I like this better. Didn't even know that Econoline housing was a thing.

I believe the Econoline snout is also a couple inches longer than the Windstar snout. The Econoline and F150 both take the same air filter but not sure if those boxes are actually the same, I never bothered ripping one out.

I originally was trying to fit the entire Econoline box into the engine bay but there just wasn't enough room to do it. Maybe without AC lines in the way and bending the oil dipstick tube. Then you'd have the box pointing downward pretty far to clear the hood and you'd need to route the pipe back up to go over the valve cover.
 
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Anybody know how big the little rubber intake horn opening on the factory jeep airbox is compared to the Windstar box?

If your talking internal-Might be off a mm but I think the factory is 47mm. The cross over tube is 50mm on the factory.

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This doesn't really pertain to the OP's original question specifically but seems like a good place to put the info.

Main housing is from a Windstar, and shortened. I've seen some mention the snout being so small on the Windstar, which is true. I think it's something like 2-1/4." So I grabbed a larger Econoline air box and grafted the snout end of the housing onto the Windstar box. That snout is closer to 3", I can't recall exactly. Then the rest of the intake plumbing is full 3" with it necking down to the throttle body with a 3" to 2-5/8" 90°.

The fitment is really tight with the hood down. There wasn't much wiggle room to make it all work. But if I can make this work with this circuitous routing, there's no reason it can't be done with standard throttle body placement. It'll just take some fiddling.

I've got other variables at play here that are giving me some intake temp struggles, but for a stock Jeep I think by far and away the biggest source of heat for IATs is going to be the intake manifold's proximity to the exhaust manifold. I'm planning to pull the intake manifold off in the near future to gold-wrap the bottom of it.

Worth noting the IAT sensor is in the intake manifold in the JTEC era TJs and they moved it to the intake tube in the NGC era TJs. I've moved mine to just below the supercharger.

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Great info.what years are these intakes coming off of?

I used this thermotec insulation on the bottom of my intake. It hasn't peeled off at all.

https://www.amazon.com/Thermo-Tec-1...zed-Barrier/dp/B00029KC2K/?tag=wranglerorg-20

I've considered wrapping the primaries too. Might do that eventually
 
This doesn't really pertain to the OP's original question specifically but seems like a good place to put the info.

Main housing is from a Windstar, and shortened. I've seen some mention the snout being so small on the Windstar, which is true. I think it's something like 2-1/4." So I grabbed a larger Econoline air box and grafted the snout end of the housing onto the Windstar box. That snout is closer to 3", I can't recall exactly. Then the rest of the intake plumbing is full 3" with it necking down to the throttle body with a 3" to 2-5/8" 90°.

The fitment is really tight with the hood down. There wasn't much wiggle room to make it all work. But if I can make this work with this circuitous routing, there's no reason it can't be done with standard throttle body placement. It'll just take some fiddling.

I've got other variables at play here that are giving me some intake temp struggles, but for a stock Jeep I think by far and away the biggest source of heat for IATs is going to be the intake manifold's proximity to the exhaust manifold. I'm planning to pull the intake manifold off in the near future to gold-wrap the bottom of it.

Worth noting the IAT sensor is in the intake manifold in the JTEC era TJs and they moved it to the intake tube in the NGC era TJs. I've moved mine to just below the supercharger.

View attachment 553368
View attachment 553364
View attachment 553362

I did something similar just out of aluminum pipe.

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