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Vented Hood Water Question
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Hello, I just got a VIS carbon Fiber Vented hood yesterday and I was wondering if it would be a problem when water gets into specific part. I have attached picture and circled in red pen.
Will there be problem if water gets on there? Please help! |
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This is how vented hood looks like
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OP, that's the least of your concerns. Those are grounds.
Intake should be a concern and alternator. And those aren't really concern either. So you should be all good |
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These two images should help.
First up is the VIS I believe, closes shot I can get to that area: http://www.octanemotorsports.com/images/CRC-1058521.jpg Second is a shot with areas where the Seibon TS hood vents are located which is about on par with the VIS hood locations (just smaller vents): http://www.the370z.com/attachment.ph...1&d=1405368210 |
As DE mentioned, your circled area is of no concern at all. Getting water there is no worse then getting water anywhere on the chassis of the vehicle.
For typical rainfall you dont really need to be concerned about anything unless your air filters are gratuitously exposed or become submerged. In those occasional water apocalypse from the sky moments, I might be concerned with standing water buildup around certain engine components and avoid driving the car. Such as perhaps in the valvecover area and dripping around the coils into the plug wells and hell even then I dont know if it would matter. Last time I *personally* saw a wet engine cause problems was when cars had spark plug wires. About 50,000 miles with my vented hood (Seibon TS Style) and the only annoyance I have is my engine is all water spots and dried car wash soap. |
I have the Carbon Creations Hot Wheels (I'm not sure they are the same) hood shown above and the only two problems its caused were both mods to the car. The Stillen supercharger has a vent on the top that allows water into the oil, and a dead Aquamist relay that got wet. If the car is stock you shouldn't have any problems, I fixed both of mine with sheet metal covers.
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That hood design is almost 'over-vented'... I prefer the JP-R hood for effective venting with minimal water intrusion...
http://img.tapatalk.com/d/14/05/29/8aguby7u.jpg http://img.tapatalk.com/d/14/05/15/ta6amega.jpg |
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The vents are big on my hood but I was looking for max air flow for cooling on the track not looks and it does a great job at that.
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Short term, water on the ground crimp connectors is no problem - if it shorts to ground, who cares? Over time, it will promote oxidation/corrosion of the wire and connector. Shouldn't be a problem unless you drive in a lot of rain. A good coat of paint or other non-permeable coating will help but probably not worth the effort.
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An interesting thread would be one that showed what was under the vents of different hoods. I'm going with the Varis Arising II. Going to try and find a top-down and see if they sit over my turbos.
http://www.the370z.com/members/arrva...ero-kit-23.jpg |
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The headers are producing the most heat, they're too far forward to cover those.
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The venting of the headers is probably a very difficult task, hence why most ceramic coat and/or wrap them to just push the heat farther down the exhaust and keep engine/header separation as much as possible. Now there still has not been any 'real' data provided on the 370z of where our high heat points are, pressure zones, and what venting certain areas actually do. From just slapping on a Seibon TS hood and doing some pre-vented hood data logs and some post, I have seen some solid temp drops or better temp management. The other result I have notice is my most forward vents extra the most hot air, while the farther back ones do very little (I am sure they help but not as much as the front). |
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