Hoblick
Well-Known Member
reading on the holley site, it says it comes with the fuel rail kit. any insight on that. is it a kit to fit stock fuel rails, or are they supplying new fuel rails?
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reading on the holley site, it says it comes with the fuel rail kit. any insight on that. is it a kit to fit stock fuel rails, or are they supplying new fuel rails?
NiceThey provide new rails but sadly that is all I can say right now.
I am pretty sure aluminum isn't any worse than composite when it comes to heat. I thought it was for cost/weight when composite is used. Aluminum probably isn't even if that much heavier than composite either.Aluminum heat soak?
Think about it like this, ever put aluminum foil in the oven and notice it doesn't really get that hot and even if it does it dissipates the heat very quickly? You can usually grab aluminum foil out of the oven with your bare hands.
Yup, I'm sure that would make a difference. Good point haha, that's why I said I'm not a science major haha.The lack of mass of the foil is mostly responsible for that. Put the entire roll of aluminum foil in the oven for long enough and try to pull it out with your bare hand, you will likely burn your hands. Same goes for a hunk of aluminum in the shape of a manifold.
The lack of mass of the foil is mostly responsible for that. Put the entire roll of aluminum foil in the oven for long enough and try to pull it out with your bare hand, you will likely burn your hands. Same goes for a hunk of aluminum in the shape of a manifold.
Just a fun test!This is incorrect, aluminum is conductive, not convective. It allows heat to pass through it as it has a high specific heat. A mass of aluminum will retain some heat but not nearly as much as steel or iron. Other than weight savings this is why we no longer have cast iron heads...and in many cases blocks.
The aluminum foil in the oven is a good example and putting the whole roll won't change the results. In fact most of the heat you would feel in it is from the air trapped in the roll.
Better test, take a bare aluminum cooking sheet and put in the oven. It won't hold nearly as much heat as a ceramic or glass cooking plate. Most of the heat you initially feel is actually the thin layer of air that surrounds the metal.
But, all that being said, you did say "for long enough" and any material will get hot if you leave it in "for long enough".
This is incorrect, aluminum is conductive, not convective. It allows heat to pass through it as it has a high specific heat. A mass of aluminum will retain some heat but not nearly as much as steel or iron. Other than weight savings this is why we no longer have cast iron heads...and in many cases blocks.
The aluminum foil in the oven is a good example and putting the whole roll won't change the results. In fact most of the heat you would feel in it is from the air trapped in the roll.
Better test, take a bare aluminum cooking sheet and put in the oven. It won't hold nearly as much heat as a ceramic or glass cooking plate. Most of the heat you initially feel is actually the thin layer of air that surrounds the metal.
But, all that being said, you did say "for long enough" and any material will get hot if you leave it in "for long enough".