Toyman01 wrote:tuna55 wrote:Intake and exhaust manifolds can make pretty big power gains over stock. Especially on a 12A. The 12A was 110hp stock. With headers and a good manifold you can push that over 140. Think of it like building a SBC to turn 7K and then putting stock cast manifolds on it. A rotary needs to breath. Racing Beat will also sell you the exhaust flange to build your own exhausts. Use good tube to the collector because the exhaust gets HOT. Ebay lists intakes fairly often, but even the stock intake and Nikki 4 barrel run decent if you don't have the room in the budget. Bypass all the smog crap and snatch the choke out of it. The biggest gains are in the exhaust. For 13B stuff you probably need to talk to Curmudgeon. I'm more of a carbed 12A guy. A stock NA rotary is as reliable as dirt. Don't run it hot, don't run out of oil and keep it turned up. Most of them crap out from carbon. If it doesn't see the red line every time you run it, you're doing it wrong.Toyman01 wrote: In reply to tuna55: Because lemons is about making laps more than making speed. The Civic was bone stock and slow as hell and we still finished 10th. The t-bird was fast as hell and didn't finish. That and last I checked the seal/gasket kits were big money. Run it stock and keep it running.See, I live in small block chevy land - I didn't realize that the seals and gaskets were big $$, I think you're right then. What gains are there to be had in 12A and 13B land by just doing intake and exhaust?
Dude, 140 and a free motor and all I need to do is intake and exhaust? I changed my mind, this isn't a good idea for lemons, it's the only idea.