A few were interested in waht they were in buy swap and sell.
Here is a pictorial for those interested.
Just more of a Tech point now
This is the hood jax
pins securing hood for normal operation
pull the pins and the lid comes off
install hood jax and pin in place
re-install hood into second hole
All done
What does the threaded rod do and what supports the weight of the decklid ?:o
You drill a 10mm hole in the U bracket and the threaded rod fits in there and the nut holds it there.
This is what supports the lid.
You cant see the hole on Blue2 cause i havent run the hood jax since Blue1 and i had a hole on them.
I am going to pull the U bracket off Blue1 and spray - just so i dont have a hole in the second one
those wheels are fooly shick, blue. and i see you have a oil reservoir overflow sump thingy. WHERE FROM? HOW DO I GET ONE!??!?!
need one for valla...
eep.
otherwise it's gonna be a coke bottle or something. running.. out.. of .. time...
Pete
its a CB Performance
http://www.cbperformance.com/catalog.asp?ProductID=241
picked it up somewhere 2nd hand. They are good!
Dunno if anyone sells them here though.
ta blue, something else on my shopping list now
Hi folks, I'm just about to pick up another batch of freshly-made Hoodjax so get your orders in for spring/summer!
Lets more air in, makes your car go faster, drops oil temperature, reduces hot-idle stumbles, improves throttle response, makes the lame walk and the
blind see!
Thought I'd 'bump' this thread because it's the best at explaining what the Hoodjax device is and how it fits to the rear of Beetles.
$80 plus P&H.
[ Edited on 19-11-2006 by VWCOOL ]
Quote: |
I have always run my valve cover breathers and OEM breather to a central catch tank (with air cleaner attatched) which drains the return oil to the
crankcase... usually back via the fuel pump boss, as I run an electric fuel pump..... Never had any issues with vapour coming out the OEM crankcase
breather with this arangement.... Any engine that can produce more RPM than a stocker has the potential to create greater crankcase breathing issues
and ofcourse older engines start to produce blow-by also... Having an effective crankcase breather stops this phenomenon.... Just DONT plumb it to you
carby aircleaners!.... It MUST vent to atmosphere to work effectively.
And I like the Hoodjax.... I have used a similar thing for the past 20 years on various VW's and it works a treat!
Quote: |
High reving engines can produce excessively high levels of crankcase pressure... The OEM set-up just can't cope with is.... And most aftermarket carb kits are NOT designed to burn off the extra oil vapour that is pushed their way.... And if you only pass it one side on a twin carb set-up (as I have seen many times), you run the risk of effecting the tune on one side of the engine..... the best option is add more outlet areas (valve covers is the most common area) for the extra crankcase pressure to vent too and feed this to a centralised breather box, which then drains any collected oil back to the crankcase... Its a very common addition to performance vehicles... Infact its in the rules for most motorsport activity I believe...
Quote: |
Plumbing to carb air cleaners is fine and is in fact required by law. Oil won't get up that high unless you have overfilled your sump and if your
engine is getting too much blowby, it's because your rings are stuffed
Anyhow, back on topic, fellers!
thats why VW engines were the enemy of the USA pollution laws...
with the engine breather outlet under the engine....
and with no seal on the Crankshaft pulley...
heaps of fumes into the atmosphere..
so pollution is at a maximum
with air cooled VW engines
and yes, I have overfilled My engine a bit...
its hard to judge...
My engine has done less than 1000kms since the engine was overhauled... [10 years ago]
Lee
the pipe going down was deleted in mid 73 when alternators started so that only one PCV went to the air cleaner
which makes for a leakier engine from the breather/filler
but back on subject its a smart thing to do in summer specially if u have a twinport/doghouse engine in a pre 72 vw
even volkswagen worked out after 12months that 2 decklid vents wasnt enough for the new doghouse cooling system
i see so many bugs with these engines and no decklid vents and the owners dont know why their cars run hotter oil temps
-Joel
[ Edited on 3-9-2006 by DUB74L ]
I said crankcase pressure.... NOT excessive engine oil..... Though excessive crankcase pressure can carry oil vapour aswell guys.... thats why high
reving engines need improved crankcase breathing.... If you have never experienced the phenomenon, with a big engine, then you are not trying hard
enough!...
Some of you guys who are old enough to remember when the BERG's visited these shores, may remember that god damn ugly breather box that Gary made for
the Black car when he was staying with Jeff Unwin.... It was massive big white thing that was built to handle the huge amount of crankcase pressure
that the BIG engine was creating.... In his early runs at Eastern Creek he had a few oil downs from excessive crankcase pressure.... sure this is an
extreme case, but that was one of the reasons Gene Berg developed the 365 style breather/filler for TI engines in the first place.... And that was the
type of breather they originally ran on the Black car... But even 365 style breather/filler couldn't cope with the increase in capacity!
Bigger engine + bigger revs=More crankcase pressure....
Result.... Its gotta go somewhere.
Thats why competition engines require more effective crankcase breathers with built in oil vapour traps....
Nice warm day today... So, who wants some Hoodjax? :bounce
[ Edited on 10-11-2006 by VWCOOL ]
Nice plug!....
VWCOOL: How would one go about obtaining a set of your hoodjax?
Ta
Yes,
I agree...
Summer is just about here....
Don't run a closed engine lid....
You will notice the difference...
its amazing really....
All the engine bay is cooler,, much cooler...
and No, Rain doesn't effect the engine at all.....
I leave mine open All the time....
Raining or not...
Lee
http://community.webshots.com/user/vw68autobug
Quote: |
Hi Neil,
I changed My AIR filter to one with louvers so it doesn't block up with water...
that is possibly the only problem...
You can buy waterproofing kits for the coil and dizzy
if they are affected...
My Son, has twin webers and has run his open in the wet.
While you are driving, the rain doesn't normally go in there
its when you have stopped...
or you could put plastic or metal covers over the carbies...
or different air filters...
waterproof ones....
but I wouldn't drive mine in the summer without the engine lid open...
Not just the engine is cooler...
Everything is cooler, and thats got to better....
Lee
...or you could simply do what Hoodjax are designed for, and remove them in 20 seconds... :thumb
where can i get them in melbourne?
email or u2u VWCOOL (above), he makes em and will send them out to you...