Great fiber glass body parts at the best prices, RennSpeed Motorsports is a great Porsche parts vendor |
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Great fiber glass body parts at the best prices, RennSpeed Motorsports is a great Porsche parts vendor |
stewteral |
Jun 3 2010, 11:10 PM
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#1
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Old Member Group: Members Posts: 384 Joined: 4-December 07 From: Camarillo, CA Member No.: 8,424 Region Association: Southern California |
To all 914 pushers:
I took a run to RennSpeed Motorsports today and bought some spare 914 parts: -A set of 11" rear flares: $175 -A set of rocker panels (to mate with my 9" front & 11" rear flares) $175 I wanted to pass on the info about this company as the prices are great and the parts are well made. I have had my original set since 2002 and can recommend the quality: all parts come with a thick white gel coat and a very smooth and flaw-free finish. Peter Ng is the company owner and a great guy to deal with. His prices can't be beat, however, since he hasn't raised his prices since 2002, he told me he would have to due to his increased cost. check out his site for the 914 offerings: http://www.rennspd.com/Products.asp?Task=S...=13&catID=4 As a "heads-up" if you are looking for fiber glass parts, order now before his raises the prices. Enjoy, Terry |
rickthejetman |
Jul 18 2010, 04:51 PM
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#2
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Member Group: Members Posts: 90 Joined: 5-May 09 From: victorville ,ca Member No.: 10,335 Region Association: None |
Hey stewteral what are those awesome scoops for and where did you get them? i was thinking about doing this for my oil cooler and my intercooler on the other side.
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stewteral |
Jul 25 2010, 11:29 PM
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#3
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Old Member Group: Members Posts: 384 Joined: 4-December 07 From: Camarillo, CA Member No.: 8,424 Region Association: Southern California |
Hey stewteral what are those awesome scoops for and where did you get them? i was thinking about doing this for my oil cooler and my intercooler on the other side. Hey rickthejetman, Thanks for the compliment on the side scoops, since I made them myself. I live near the ocean in SOCAL and thus was ablle to get a bunch of foam scraps from my local surf board shop for the cost of a 6-pack of beer. I shaped the scoops and made molds. After making my first pair of scoops, I recently made molds for them. I also had to make molds for the feed-through channel to my oil coolers and fresh air intake on the right side, but those molds tore apart after the first use. I looked at aftermarket sources for scoops, but nothing seemed to be a good fit so I was forced to make my own. They stand off the bodywork at 2-1/2" and are a good fit for the 914 lines. I have the BIG rear flares, so next time, I would make them taller. However, for a "modest V8 conversion" car, they are fine and appear to work well as they are. Is your car a V8 conversion....or have you come up with the great idea of cooling a 6-Cyl WITHOUT running 30 feet of Aeroquip lines? If none of above, you really shouldn't need them: I tufted my car and found that the Porsche engineer's design actually DOES flow air into the engine bay providing sufficient air to the 411 motor. Best, Terry |
rickthejetman |
Jul 26 2010, 06:21 AM
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#4
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Member Group: Members Posts: 90 Joined: 5-May 09 From: victorville ,ca Member No.: 10,335 Region Association: None |
Hey stewteral what are those awesome scoops for and where did you get them? i was thinking about doing this for my oil cooler and my intercooler on the other side. Hey rickthejetman, Thanks for the compliment on the side scoops, since I made them myself. I live near the ocean in SOCAL and thus was ablle to get a bunch of foam scraps from my local surf board shop for the cost of a 6-pack of beer. I shaped the scoops and made molds. After making my first pair of scoops, I recently made molds for them. I also had to make molds for the feed-through channel to my oil coolers and fresh air intake on the right side, but those molds tore apart after the first use. I looked at aftermarket sources for scoops, but nothing seemed to be a good fit so I was forced to make my own. They stand off the bodywork at 2-1/2" and are a good fit for the 914 lines. I have the BIG rear flares, so next time, I would make them taller. However, for a "modest V8 conversion" car, they are fine and appear to work well as they are. Is your car a V8 conversion....or have you come up with the great idea of cooling a 6-Cyl WITHOUT running 30 feet of Aeroquip lines? If none of above, you really shouldn't need them: I tufted my car and found that the Porsche engineer's design actually DOES flow air into the engine bay providing sufficient air to the 411 motor. Best, Terry i have a subaru conversion so option "C". Its not done yet haven't quite figured out what i want to do with the intercooler and the oilcooler yet. I own an MR2 so thats where the sidemount intercooler ideas are coming from. thats why i got excited when i saw your scoops. (IMG:style_emoticons/default/cheer.gif) maybe i could get you to post up a few more pictures? i work at a place that builds composite aircraft so i can get one of the guys to help me make my own molds.(i'm an aircraft mechanic) |
stewteral |
Jul 26 2010, 02:30 PM
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#5
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Old Member Group: Members Posts: 384 Joined: 4-December 07 From: Camarillo, CA Member No.: 8,424 Region Association: Southern California |
Hey stewteral what are those awesome scoops for and where did you get them? i was thinking about doing this for my oil cooler and my intercooler on the other side. Hey rickthejetman, Thanks for the compliment on the side scoops, since I made them myself. I live near the ocean in SOCAL and thus was ablle to get a bunch of foam scraps from my local surf board shop for the cost of a 6-pack of beer. I shaped the scoops and made molds. After making my first pair of scoops, I recently made molds for them. I also had to make molds for the feed-through channel to my oil coolers and fresh air intake on the right side, but those molds tore apart after the first use. I looked at aftermarket sources for scoops, but nothing seemed to be a good fit so I was forced to make my own. They stand off the bodywork at 2-1/2" and are a good fit for the 914 lines. I have the BIG rear flares, so next time, I would make them taller. However, for a "modest V8 conversion" car, they are fine and appear to work well as they are. Is your car a V8 conversion....or have you come up with the great idea of cooling a 6-Cyl WITHOUT running 30 feet of Aeroquip lines? If none of above, you really shouldn't need them: I tufted my car and found that the Porsche engineer's design actually DOES flow air into the engine bay providing sufficient air to the 411 motor. Best, Terry i have a subaru conversion so option "C". Its not done yet haven't quite figured out what i want to do with the intercooler and the oilcooler yet. I own an MR2 so thats where the sidemount intercooler ideas are coming from. thats why i got excited when i saw your scoops. (IMG:style_emoticons/default/cheer.gif) maybe i could get you to post up a few more pictures? i work at a place that builds composite aircraft so i can get one of the guys to help me make my own molds.(i'm an aircraft mechanic) Hey rickthejetman, Thanks for he explanation. I agree, with your application, side scoops would be a very good thing. I attached a couple photos I had, but will take some close-up shots with reference rulers to gage the size. I have a question for you: how are you planning to flow the air through the engine bay with the Subi? I learned that my water-cooled Chevy STILL was 30% aircooled. For the Chevy, I'm taking the air from under the car and running it UP through the engine bay and out to top. Thus feeding from a somewhat high pressure area up to the low-pressure area behind the notch roofline. To prevent the air going around the car back into the engine bay, I installed a 2" tall aluminum lip on the front edge of the lid. The more I've done to promote this airflow, the cooler the engine runs. Another question: are you mounting the radiator in the front trunk or rear trunk? I learned the hard way the exhausting out the bottom of the front trunk was not very efficient and blocked air flow back to the engine bay. The absolute best exhaust flow is out the top of the hood and when I finally made that change, I was amazed at how much cooler the engine ran. I have never liked the idea of exhausting the radiator through the fender wells : the wheels turn creating a lot of turbulence and inefficient air flow . However, with the 300 HP from the Subi, it should work fine. I have a bigger challenge cooling 500 HP. I'm envious of the resources you have available to you. With carbon fiber, you should only need to make bucks the right shape and wrap them with the carbon fiber/resin fabric. Is should be a lot less work than fiber glassing. Do you know anyone with a CAD to prototype system? Best of luck with your project. I'm guessing you have all the training and experience to do a very nice job of it. Terry Attached image(s) |
rickthejetman |
Jul 27 2010, 02:24 PM
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#6
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Member Group: Members Posts: 90 Joined: 5-May 09 From: victorville ,ca Member No.: 10,335 Region Association: None |
Hey rickthejetman,
Thanks for he explanation. I agree, with your application, side scoops would be a very good thing. I attached a couple photos I had, but will take some close-up shots with reference rulers to gage the size. I have a question for you: how are you planning to flow the air through the engine bay with the Subi? I learned that my water-cooled Chevy STILL was 30% aircooled. For the Chevy, I'm taking the air from under the car and running it UP through the engine bay and out to top. Thus feeding from a somewhat high pressure area up to the low-pressure area behind the notch roofline. To prevent the air going around the car back into the engine bay, I installed a 2" tall aluminum lip on the front edge of the lid. The more I've done to promote this airflow, the cooler the engine runs. Another question: are you mounting the radiator in the front trunk or rear trunk? I learned the hard way the exhausting out the bottom of the front trunk was not very efficient and blocked air flow back to the engine bay. The absolute best exhaust flow is out the top of the hood and when I finally made that change, I was amazed at how much cooler the engine ran. I have never liked the idea of exhausting the radiator through the fender wells : the wheels turn creating a lot of turbulence and inefficient air flow . However, with the 300 HP from the Subi, it should work fine. I have a bigger challenge cooling 500 HP. I'm envious of the resources you have available to you. With carbon fiber, you should only need to make bucks the right shape and wrap them with the carbon fiber/resin fabric. Is should be a lot less work than fiber glassing. Do you know anyone with a CAD to prototype system? Best of luck with your project. I'm guessing you have all the training and experience to do a very nice job of it. Terry [/quote] well as far as the airflow through the engine bay that all depends on what i do with the intercooler set up. i was thinking of a sidemount if i do that the air will have to exit the engine bay lid. if i go with a stock type intercooler (air to air behind the engine over the trans) i was going to have it vent out the rear deck lid(i don't have a trunk anymore). option c was an air to water with the exchanger either side mount or all the way back up to the front trunk. then the engine bay would agian just have to exit the engine lid. as far as the radiator its in the front trunk its gooing to exit the hood ala gt40 style. i have a friend that tells me we can make hood louvers from composites as well. that might be pretty trick if they flow the lines of the triangular hood suppport. i'm still in the early stages of my build so i havent got everything figured out yet. i didnt like the idea of venting under the car either all thou it seems to work well on my mr2. as luck has it i came across an oil to water cooler in the trash it was left over from an R&D project at work the other day. if i can get that plumbed into my hard lines going up front that would be the ultimate setup. very minimal pressure/flow loss no need for an oil t-stat. very clean install. as far as skills with composites mine are really only based in airframe repair. im not so skilled in fabwork. but i have a few friends in the production side of life that owe me favors. if it burns fuel i can fix it/ build it/ make it better. if it involves fabwork/ bodywork i get by with a little help from my friends. i appreciate you sharing yourscoop pics with me. i have been kicking around a few ideas then i ran into yours and those look very clean/trick on the 914 almost factory race style. |
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