JohnJameson
Member
- Messages
- 6
- Reaction score
- 0
- Points
- 10
- Boat Make
- Boatless
- Year
- 2020
- Boat Model
- AR
- Boat Length
- 19
-Bought new in May
-30 Hours now
-Do all my own maintenance with service manual
-First boat, I'm coming from an LS3
- Immediately regretted not going boosted
- Will upgrade in a few years but for now...
Ribbon delete with Riva spacer is done, looking at doing an intake but my concern is how hot the engine bay gets.
I'm not so worried about more airflow, I want to get the IATs down. At least with any other engines high intake temps and it will start to pull timing. Is that the case here or am I not getting something? After running wot I can barely put my hand in the bay, it can't be helping that little engine sucking in all that hot air.
I'm pretty decent at mild fabrication on cars and I don't plan on spending a ton of money because I understand any gains are going to be unexciting at best, however I'd like to try. Anyone ever tried pulling air from somewhere else?
I was thinking maybe through the compartment where the existing airbox is, towards the front, and creating some type of duct high under the bench seat on the port side. It stays dry there and would get "colder" air. Then putting heat reflective tape on the portion in the engine compartment leading to the throttle body.
One concern was all the tubing might restrict flow, but i think with an aftermarket filter, the flow combined with colder air might offset the added length of pipe? What do you all think?
-Other question is about the lack of general engine information that is displayed. Does yamaha have a proprietary plug that allows for diagnostic information as well as temperatures? OBD2 ports in cars are standardized and you can plug in a Bluetooth reader, download an app and display it on your phone or tablet. Does that exist or is that fantasy land in boating?
I have seen all of the tuners that cost $400, is there a cheaper option to just see how hot the air or oil is?
Sorry for the lengthy post, thanks everyone!
-30 Hours now
-Do all my own maintenance with service manual
-First boat, I'm coming from an LS3
- Immediately regretted not going boosted
- Will upgrade in a few years but for now...
Ribbon delete with Riva spacer is done, looking at doing an intake but my concern is how hot the engine bay gets.
I'm not so worried about more airflow, I want to get the IATs down. At least with any other engines high intake temps and it will start to pull timing. Is that the case here or am I not getting something? After running wot I can barely put my hand in the bay, it can't be helping that little engine sucking in all that hot air.
I'm pretty decent at mild fabrication on cars and I don't plan on spending a ton of money because I understand any gains are going to be unexciting at best, however I'd like to try. Anyone ever tried pulling air from somewhere else?
I was thinking maybe through the compartment where the existing airbox is, towards the front, and creating some type of duct high under the bench seat on the port side. It stays dry there and would get "colder" air. Then putting heat reflective tape on the portion in the engine compartment leading to the throttle body.
One concern was all the tubing might restrict flow, but i think with an aftermarket filter, the flow combined with colder air might offset the added length of pipe? What do you all think?
-Other question is about the lack of general engine information that is displayed. Does yamaha have a proprietary plug that allows for diagnostic information as well as temperatures? OBD2 ports in cars are standardized and you can plug in a Bluetooth reader, download an app and display it on your phone or tablet. Does that exist or is that fantasy land in boating?
I have seen all of the tuners that cost $400, is there a cheaper option to just see how hot the air or oil is?
Sorry for the lengthy post, thanks everyone!