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I don't think I understand the intent with what you're building. Will the compressor be running so long/hard that cooling off the air is beneficial to downstream consumption?
You already have ways to drain the tank, and unless the compressor is running close to 100% duty cycle, why is cooling the air off beneficial? You can't touch the lines with the bumper installed, and everything is far enough away from the bumper to avoid paint damage
For the intermittent duty of the system, I genuinely think foregoing the cooling is the appropriate path forward. Occam's Razor
I won't try to convince you because I'm probably overcomplicating a simple system. I am sure it won't be run too often, or so I hope, but when it is it will probably go for a few minutes to raise 60psi up to 145. I just don't want hassles down range with the mac valves or gates if water becomes an issue on a car I intend to drive a ton with regular use.
The only things not guaranteed to be bulletproof are the many fittings along the way.
All the new fittings have now been attached and sealed save for the ends going out to the PTFE lines. Did the cad work for the mounts. Played with pump placement and I believe we have an optimal spot for the cooler.
Now to figure out HOW to mount the cooler in this odd spot with a mild standoff.
Let's see. What's new. I'm still figuring out how to mount the cooler and fan. I realize I should have bought a pre made fan combination with a shroud and built in mounting points. It looks like I now need to get some aluminum sheet and make exactly that and I still am not sure how to solidly secure that to this simple cooler. The fan is easy once the shroud is made and cut. More custom work eh?
I got the tank and the compressor mounts cut out and quickly cleaned up so I don't slice myself badly on them. Nothing artful as they will never be seen, just some solid units. The plan is to Rivnut the bumper in three places for each. Then drill out probably slightly larger holes in the plates to allow final mounting angle perfection.
I also got the Huron manifolds and the HPT turbine housings out of storage and ground off the edges where the white lightning ceramic coating from Swain Tech had formed ridges. Any seal should be unimpeded now.
One such seal will be oem GM/Delco MLS exhaust gaskets which I just purchased new as well. Forty bucks of security well spent. I wager the Huron manifolds are very straight and won't need anything like Cometic 30 or 45 unless I make some major tuning mistakes! Don't mess with what works still applies. I probably could have bought Mahle which is reputed to be comparable to oem for even less cost though.
The hope is that I can get the tank system largely mounted and lines routed, and then the battery setup also mounted and routed in the rear and have much or that wrapped up short of small details. One now annoying one being that cooler mount setup.
With those things achieved, attention goes back to the engine, buttoning it up, grinding and fixing pieces for the new exhaust setup and then mounting the turbos.
At that point momentum shifts into endgame. Wiring will be the biggest/slowest part. Fmic, charge tubes, air intake tubes, cooling system, suspension, brakes, fuel, A/C, intake/tb is ready to go, oil cooling and lines, Mac valves and air control.
I probably need to verify I have all the right needed vehicle speed, 2x turbine speed, 2x manifold psi sensors and get those ordered this week so they don't complicate installs down the road.
The basic mechanic work is easy and fast. The custom stuff is often the stumbler.
I invited a buddy to go hit a car show tonight. He got here and said instead let's put some time on the Z06, so he set about pre-wiring those bussed fuse and relay boxes and I got the compressor mount fitted, drilled and tapped. The more I looked at it I realized I don't need to rivnut or try to align anything. Once the plate is in place I'll just sink some M8 bolts straight through the plate and the bumper top and then nylock them from inside the bumper as long as a ratchet can reach the bolt heads inside. I might need to counter sink the plate. We'll see. I'm trying to make it simpler than getting a bunch of holes to line up with some rivnuts.
I also put what was to be final coats of black on the new accessory bracket for the Z06. And then when I moved the assembly to let it dry the cardboard shifted and messed up the only visible part. I'll let it cure, sand it and finish it up later.
Many times we tend to over complicate the simple things. I know for me, I get hung up on the nuance and then end up in analysis paralysis. At the end of the day, I should have just done the simple thing and been done. I also know the pain of the fresh paint thing...
No. Opposite function. I'm not trying to let the air out, but trying to air the domes up. Then I can run a low psi spring and cruise around with less boost and power but demand it by using the gates/tank to pressurize the domes. This also gives the ecu direct control for traction by gear.
Here is that plate I tapped before going away. It looks to fit securely and I'll accept that as proof of concept. I left the ground bolt in place. The plate probably needs two or three bolts put through it and tb bumper to secure it and keep it from rattling. That will be next.
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