C&L Intake Manifold Coming Out- Winter 2008
C&L Intake Manifold Coming Out- Winter 2008
This winter, C&L Performance is finally coming out with their intake manifold for the 2005-2009 Mustang GT. Go to "cnlperformance.com" for details.
C&L has a GREAT writeup on this intake manifold at http://www.cnlperformance.com/05_3v.html. It is ALWAYS nice to see companies bringing products to market and actually explaining how and when it helps instead of just saying "40hp with a simple 10 minute bolt on!!!!". That definitely raises my opinion of C&L quite a bit. And my opinion wasn't low to begin with.
In for actual dyno results.
A MAJOR advantage to this intake is for people with ported heads. If you put a set of CMCV plates up to a Livernois ported head you can see that the runners on the delete plates are actually a good bit smaller and are a restriction on your nice new ported heads. The CMCV plates can also not be ported to fit. You CAN however port the C&L intake to match. So for built setups this manifold is going to gain some serious numbers.
Jon
I'm with Tom. I'd like to stay N/A. If this manifold shows good numbers I'd like to try it along with a set of ported heads. Yeah, I may end up spending a little more than what I blower would cost but the cost would be spread out over time instead of 6K at one time. Still time to decide.
Jon
Jon
I am glad this was helpful. Also, FAST is not coming out with theirs, nor trickflow, as far as I know. Hm 799$ for 24hp(C&L manifold) vs. $699 for 30hp(intake/tune). I doubt the gains will be EVEN 24hp, depending on the mods the owner has installed prior. I am sure you would have to put it on a fully stock car to get those kind of gains.
Hey Jon, your not alone. I too am staying N/A, and this setup is VERY enticing!! Just gotta find out eventually, if it will fit under a strut tower brace. Mine is color matched to the car (blue with white stripes) and really stands out in the engine bay. if this is the same height, I'm good to go. knowing my luck, its probably not though.
I am glad this was helpful. Also, FAST is not coming out with theirs, nor trickflow, as far as I know. Hm 799$ for 24hp(C&L manifold) vs. $699 for 30hp(intake/tune). I doubt the gains will be EVEN 24hp, depending on the mods the owner has installed prior. I am sure you would have to put it on a fully stock car to get those kind of gains.
Doing just the manifold would be kind of like sticking a tunnel-ram manifold on a stock 302 with a 2-barrel carb on top.
one thing i think will help is a tune after because c&l said some cylinders were getting more air than other with the stock setup so with c&l you should theorecticaly be able to add more timing without pinging
It's more than that... With the C&L, the runner length and cross-section will have changed, which in turn will affect the VE of the engine overall, never mind specific cylinders... RPM and load dependent, the cylinders may wind up inhaling a larger air-charge than with the stock manifold, which in turn will require more fuel, and will require a different timing map to maintain drivability. None of this is a bad thing, but it's important to realize that most likely, this will not be a bolt-on HP increase. It will require the tune for support, much the same way that a good CAI kit will require a tune, if for no other reason than to correct the transfer function for the larger MAF sensor.
Actually, I disagree, and I think you're looking at it the wrong way around... On a stock engine, there's no way the VE is high enough to completely tax the ability of the OE manifold to support airflow, so the benefit will be seen by the engine built up to increase VE. Also, the road to power begins with a tune, so it's not an either-or type of situation. I wouldn't doubt that some adjustments to the fuel and spark maps would need to be done with the new manifold, so you're probably looking at needing a tuner anyway. At that point, you might as well add on a CAI kit for good measure. The stock manifold does an outstanding job (which is why FAST and Trickflow aren't bothering to release) until you get the engine breathing quite a bit more than it does from the factory. It wouldn't surprise me to see little or no gain with this manifold until you've got cams, ported heads, and long-tubes on the car. At that point, you're kind of "maxed out" in terms of N/A stock long-block building, so the manifold may be the cherry on top...
Doing just the manifold would be kind of like sticking a tunnel-ram manifold on a stock 302 with a 2-barrel carb on top.
Doing just the manifold would be kind of like sticking a tunnel-ram manifold on a stock 302 with a 2-barrel carb on top.
Sounds very practical. I just thought the more mods you have installed to diminish air restriction, the less possible power from any future mods. For instance, if you install everything possible to open up the airways besides heads, and you then install them, the potential gain would be less, is my opinion.



