NX Nitrous for the C230K
#26
welcome! yes..i blew my engine...but also remember that i was just not putting the "juice" on it...we had also done alot of work....one thing i would like to stress here..I DID NOT CARE ABOUT MY WARRENTY...if you dont care...then heck...mod it to death...but you better hope that you have the money to back it up when something goes wrong.....if you dont...then keep it simple of buy you a toyota/lexus
#27
Member
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 145
Likes: 0
From: Long Island
1995 Ferrari Spider, Porsche 911 Turbo,01 Hayabusa, 01- E55
HEY BENZY230
I am planning on a Nitrous install for my E55.
Wondering where you found the kit? How does the fuel enrichment work?
thanks
ps if you blew your engine with a 50-shot set up correctly with an a/f meter, it was not caused by the nitrous.
I am planning on a Nitrous install for my E55.
Wondering where you found the kit? How does the fuel enrichment work?
thanks
ps if you blew your engine with a 50-shot set up correctly with an a/f meter, it was not caused by the nitrous.
#28
Originally posted by Autostream
ps if you blew your engine with a 50-shot set up correctly with an a/f meter, it was not caused by the nitrous.
ps if you blew your engine with a 50-shot set up correctly with an a/f meter, it was not caused by the nitrous.
If you really want to know the A/F you need to put in a fuel management system.
Erik
#29
ZEX 50 wet shot
I have done all I can on my 2002 2.0 M111 supercharged engine with the exception of a header. However after hanging out at a friend's tuning shop I suddenly became very interested in a ZEX 50 wet shot kit. This kit seems to have all control electronics in place as well as a lot of safety features. Has anyone had experience with a ZEX wet kit on a 4 cylinder forced induction car?
3point
3point
#30
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Joined: May 2002
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Likes: 1
From: The blue white rock, third out.
2002 C230 Coupe(M111)
Originally Posted by sdcaclint
an extra 200 hp???? no. no way. the fuel system could never keep up with that.
A phrase I remember well from the days of nitrous powered Saturn, "if you fly dry, soon you will die"... so many dry kits blew up plenty of motors.
#32
Originally Posted by Outland
With a wet kit, you bring your own fuel. BYOF!
A phrase I remember well from the days of nitrous powered Saturn, "if you fly dry, soon you will die"... so many dry kits blew up plenty of motors.
A phrase I remember well from the days of nitrous powered Saturn, "if you fly dry, soon you will die"... so many dry kits blew up plenty of motors.
#33
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Joined: May 2002
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From: The blue white rock, third out.
2002 C230 Coupe(M111)
Originally Posted by 4sfed4
Unless a second fuel pump/system is added, the existing factory fuel pump still has to provide the extra fuel though.
#34
Originally Posted by Outland
Youre experiences might differ, but in my experience, its the injectors that can't spray enough fuel.
For a wet kit, the stock injectors arent used for supplemental fuel as all the fueling required for the N2O comes from the stock fuel supply, but using its own injection nozzle. So, your stock injectors are not a limiting factor, but the stock fuel pump (and possibly feed line size) can be with the larger shots.
#35
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Joined: May 2002
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From: The blue white rock, third out.
2002 C230 Coupe(M111)
Originally Posted by 4sfed4
OK..I think we are talking about differing things. For a dry kit, the injectors have the supply the extra fuel. I too dont like dry kits for anything but smaller shots.
For a wet kit, the stock injectors arent used for supplemental fuel as all the fueling required for the N2O comes from the stock fuel supply, but using its own injection nozzle. So, your stock injectors are not a limiting factor, but the stock fuel pump (and possibly feed line size) can be with the larger shots.
For a wet kit, the stock injectors arent used for supplemental fuel as all the fueling required for the N2O comes from the stock fuel supply, but using its own injection nozzle. So, your stock injectors are not a limiting factor, but the stock fuel pump (and possibly feed line size) can be with the larger shots.
Last edited by Outland; 01-17-2005 at 11:20 PM.
#36
Originally Posted by Outland
No, were talking the same thing. I had a wet kit for over two years in my Saturn SC. The injectors/ECu couldn't bring enough fuel for the dry kit. Fuel pump had plenty of squirt, the injectors didn't. I'm not sure what point youre trying to make exactly, I just tapped the fuel line. So have most every other setup Ive seen. aux injector was in the intake just above the TB.
The point I am trying to make is that on a wet kit if you spray too much you have to make sure the stock fuel pump can keep up. The supply at that fuel rail is not unlimited. Thus my post #32 above which has caused some confusion.
On a dry kit all the nitrous system is doing is bleeding some nitrous pressure to the FPR to trick it into raising fuel pressure. This type of arrangement is more limited (as you found out).
Last edited by 4sfed4; 01-18-2005 at 08:12 AM.