- First Name
- Evan
- Joined
- Dec 10, 2021
- Threads
- 45
- Messages
- 706
- Reaction score
- 1,136
- Location
- Pittsburgh, PA
- Car(s)
- 21 Nitro Yellow A90 Supra, 10 Honda Fit Sport 5spd
- Thread starter
- #1
Hello everyone, you may remember me as "the diff brace guy" or "dude who insists his logo is a boat and not a forklift like everyone else thinks", or simply as my business name: Rapid Designs.
I'm doing a bit of market research for a potential product and need some feedback from the populace. PLEASE answer truthfully, as this poll will directly influence a future product.
I'm looking at the possibility of introducing a kit to solve high IATs for those at OEM or OEM+ power levels at a lower cost than the current batch of intake manifolds on the market. If you are unfamiliar with Supra IAT issues, essentially the only way to truly keep IATs in check, and thus not pull power, is to upgrade the intake manifold. This costs AT LEAST $2000 and can be a bit of an operation for those who may not be as mechanically inclined. Additionally all heat exchangers on the market (except maybe PWR) are downgrades compared to OEM and have not proven to actually lower IATs. The reason is due to their construction. OEM cores are built with a copper/aluminum matrix whereas aftermarket cores are built solely with aluminum. The only true solution is the manifold. But what if we add......another?
Thank you for reading and answering the poll I appreciate everyone's time
I'm doing a bit of market research for a potential product and need some feedback from the populace. PLEASE answer truthfully, as this poll will directly influence a future product.
I'm looking at the possibility of introducing a kit to solve high IATs for those at OEM or OEM+ power levels at a lower cost than the current batch of intake manifolds on the market. If you are unfamiliar with Supra IAT issues, essentially the only way to truly keep IATs in check, and thus not pull power, is to upgrade the intake manifold. This costs AT LEAST $2000 and can be a bit of an operation for those who may not be as mechanically inclined. Additionally all heat exchangers on the market (except maybe PWR) are downgrades compared to OEM and have not proven to actually lower IATs. The reason is due to their construction. OEM cores are built with a copper/aluminum matrix whereas aftermarket cores are built solely with aluminum. The only true solution is the manifold. But what if we add......another?
Thank you for reading and answering the poll I appreciate everyone's time
Sponsored