OK, get ready, here it comes.......
I got a wild hair (plus it was a balmy 40 degrees here over the weekend - perfect time to work on the car) so I took a stroll thru my favorite speed shop (aka Lowes Home Improvement). In the HVAC aisle, the always-a-fan-favorite 3" flexible aluminum ducting was procured. After a wander thru the hardware, paint, and flower arranging sections, I made my way down to Siding and Guttering. A pair of plastic 3"x2" gutter spouts later, I was in the checkout line spending the balance of my X-Mas gift card - about $12.00.
Here's the results of $12 and an hour and half of free time in the garage.
Ducting the drivers side was pretty darn easy. Lot's of room next to the tranny, lot's of clearance from the wheel, and the wheel well splash shield makes a nice mounting "bracket" for many zip ties. The passenger side is a different story. Just like traveling the the roads in Pennsylvania, you just "can't get there from here". I finally decided that a decent trim of the splash shield would allow as high of routing of the duct as possible along the edge of the oil pan. The duct on this side is now the lowest hanging part of the car and is sure to take a beating. Plus, when at full left-hand steering lock, it made the nice 3" diameter tube into a 2"x4" rectangle. Hopefully the differential of air flow from the added restriction does not cause to much of a balance issue for the brakes (hmm, will Steve by consistently locking the drivers side wheel this year?) But, for $12, what the heck. The results:
Air dam (installed in my vinyl siding air dam):
Drivers side duct:
Passenger side duct:
Let the pointing and smirking begin!
------------------
Steve Linn
'92 ITA Sentra SE-R
www.indyscca.org
[This message has been edited by Racerlinn (edited January 31, 2005).]