View Single Post
Old 10-15-2010, 10:00 PM   #5 (permalink)
N8GTOL
Base Member
 
N8GTOL's Avatar
 
Join Date: May 2010
Location: San Diego
Posts: 228
Drives: and flies
Rep Power: 22
N8GTOL has a reputation beyond reputeN8GTOL has a reputation beyond reputeN8GTOL has a reputation beyond reputeN8GTOL has a reputation beyond reputeN8GTOL has a reputation beyond reputeN8GTOL has a reputation beyond reputeN8GTOL has a reputation beyond reputeN8GTOL has a reputation beyond reputeN8GTOL has a reputation beyond reputeN8GTOL has a reputation beyond reputeN8GTOL has a reputation beyond repute
Default

I wouldn't do it to a daily driver. Maybe if you're just going to go track the car on a warm day where the rpms will remain high you could take it off.

I believe the coolant lines are there to keep the throttle body from icing up. Similar in function to the carb heat knob found on older carburetor airplane engines. With respect to airplanes, you can get carb ice on a warm clear day at a low altitude where the air temp is well above freezing (72F). I realize we dont have carburetors in our engines but there can still be a significant pressure drop down stream of the throttle butterfly where ice can form under the right low rpm conditions...ice can also form on the throttle body itself which could choke off the engine. Some really old cars were made without heated throttle bodies and there were a lot of issues that forced automakers to retrofit heat sources onto the throttle bodies.
N8GTOL is offline   Reply With Quote