Something cool I found at a local offroad expo

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Something cool I found at a local offroad expo

Postby dvst8r » Fri Feb 29, 2008 9:27 pm

It is on a 3rd gen, but it is still really cool.

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Another view
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On the truck
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In Cermichrome
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The inside transitions
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What I found it on
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No I do not make these, I just came across them at an off road expo and thought it was really cool. :grin:
1990 W250 non ic'd. Under the knife again.
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Postby Begle1 » Fri Feb 29, 2008 9:31 pm

No external wastegate provisions?

What a piece of crap. :lol:
1990 D-250 Regular Cab: Tweaked injection pump, built transmission, a cataclysmic charlie foxtrot of electronics, the most intense street-ran water injection system in the country, and some more unique stuff.
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Postby dvst8r » Fri Feb 29, 2008 9:33 pm

Begle1 wrote:No external wastegate provisions?

What a piece of crap. :lol:


Funny, I thought well where do I put the Primary now?
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Postby nooblet » Fri Feb 29, 2008 10:53 pm

There was some build where a guy put a p-pumped Cummins in a suburban around a while back. He made a custom header for it and it looked a lot like that. His build was on one of the Cummins-conversion sites. He showed how he built the header, it was sick!

Chris
1990 W250 4X4 / PODs / 366 Spring / BHAF / Lockers / 35" BFG MTs / Getrag / Valair Ceramic / 3.54:1's / Phantom II Boost/Pyro / Muffler Delete

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Postby MikeThomas » Fri Feb 29, 2008 11:52 pm

Looks like a great way to take up space and build heat in the engine compartment! :roll:
1993 W250, 5SPD, ne370's, HTT STAGE IV/14wg, DennT Pin, BHAF, P-PUMP, PUMP TWEEKS, 4" EXHAUST, 366
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Postby rbrettctd » Sat Mar 01, 2008 6:51 am

The polished one looks a lot more organized. Other than that, they look crappy! There is a company making them that look straight and nice, but go for about $1k
Randy
1991 D-250 N/I CTD. POD's, , BHAF and unger custom intake /crossover, HX35/16, 4" exhaust to 6" tip, Custom ground pin. Isspro gauges on pillar. Now Getrag equipped, SB crap clutch (12") and 3.07 gears-ready to watch the mileage soar.
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Postby PToombs » Sat Mar 01, 2008 7:07 pm

There was a big thread on TDR about those. Guy was looking for interest in building them. He did a lotta testing. Nobody had much faith in how long they would work before they broke. :shock:
pete

Just enough power to break everything behind the crankshaft.
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Postby TWorline » Sat Mar 01, 2008 9:48 pm

Someone finally labled the "passenger" side of the truck, that ought to clear up alot of confusion! ;-)
Tim Worline
1992 W250 Club Cab LE, S300 62/71, 5" stainless intake, 4" into 5" exhaust, ATS exhaust manifold, SDX 5X18 Injectors, AirDog 150, Borgeson shaft, Coolingmist Vari-cool, Con OFEK, 3" Stainless CoolerTubz, 354/749.

http://www.CoolerTubz.com/
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Postby ford69557ci » Sat Mar 01, 2008 11:37 pm

yeah i was really confused at what side the ex manifold mounted on but that solves my mystery :rock:
92 w250, NV4500, D80, maxed pump, AFC gone, extended fuel screw, more to come.
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Postby greasemonkey » Sun Mar 02, 2008 1:44 am

PToombs wrote:Nobody had much faith in how long they would work before they broke. :shock:


it ain't going to last very long at all! with the volume of heat energy and the 600-1200+ degree fairly rapid heat cycles the tubing just can't hold up. tubing barely holds up on small block twin turbos before they crack out. and like Mike mentioned, you get to use heat energy to melt plastic stuff instead of drive the turbine! awesome!
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Postby PToombs » Sun Mar 02, 2008 7:40 am

I'd love to have one just for the :2cool: factor. Open the hood, everybody goes :hs: I just don't like the idea of spending $1k and being in the middle of Indiana in 3-4 years and have the manifold break off! :shock: :pottytrain:
pete

Just enough power to break everything behind the crankshaft.
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Postby dvst8r » Sun Mar 02, 2008 10:43 am

From what I understood from the guys that I talked to those manifolds were designed for the Kore race team to run the BAJA 1000. If they last 1000 miles like that, I think they would last a life time on any of our trucks. Passenger is the name of the company that designed / manufactured them. Iirc the full name was Passenger Thermodynamic Engineering.
1990 W250 non ic'd. Under the knife again.
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Postby dvst8r » Sun Mar 02, 2008 10:45 am

greasemonkey wrote:
PToombs wrote:Nobody had much faith in how long they would work before they broke. :shock:


it ain't going to last very long at all! with the volume of heat energy and the 600-1200+ degree fairly rapid heat cycles the tubing just can't hold up. tubing barely holds up on small block twin turbos before they crack out. and like Mike mentioned, you get to use heat energy to melt plastic stuff instead of drive the turbine! awesome!


I dunno if they would crack that quick, I picked the black one up at the show (didn't want to get fingerprints on there nice shinny one) and it must have been fairly thick wall tubing as it must have weighed 50lbs+
1990 W250 non ic'd. Under the knife again.
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Postby GO OVRIT » Sun Mar 02, 2008 11:27 am

The KORE trucks don't heat and cool all that many times. They get hot and stay pretty hot until they're done. It does look pretty trick though.
92 W250 ext cab 518, big sticks, a-1000, PDR HX40, 4" exhaust w/aeroturbine, pump tweaked, K&N filter Tims Cooler tubes and 3" i/c, gauges
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Postby TWorline » Sun Mar 02, 2008 1:41 pm

Pete:

The whole thing would not break off :roll: probably just the turbo so it would take you 18 hrs. to get home! ;-)
Tim Worline
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http://www.CoolerTubz.com/
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