Bypassing coolent?
a friend of mine told me that if you bypass the coolent so that it doesnt run through your intake manifold, it would keep cooler, and the only reason its there is for warming up. there is a valve that senses temp. and makes it idle higher when its cold i guess. he said i might make the idle fluctuate a little more. does anyone know anymore about this? and how to do it on a gen3 integra gsr?
-jon
-jon
Originally Posted by g2tegls
coolant runs through the intake manifold? :thinking:
Originally Posted by integsracer
a friend of mine told me that if you bypass the coolent so that it doesnt run through your intake manifold, it would keep cooler, and the only reason its there is for warming up. there is a valve that senses temp. and makes it idle higher when its cold i guess. he said i might make the idle fluctuate a little more. does anyone know anymore about this? and how to do it on a gen3 integra gsr?
-jon
-jon
If you're talking about the inlet/outlet in the actual throttle body not the intake manifold(which i think is what you're friend is talking about) cause I've seen this topic and articles many times before, It's to warm the intake charge of air/fuel on cold starts. It helps atomize the air/fuel mixture better when it's cold. If you bypass it which I don't recommend, you might get a cold start issue or idle issue. It's not even worth the trouble because there is no real gain, you'll never feel it. gain's cost money and nothing is free. this is really true for hondas. i think the going rate for hondas is around 100 a 1hp gain these days, lol
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slammmedintegra
Integra & 97-01 Integra Type-R
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Feb 6, 2003 10:39 AM



