thanks Harry,
I was looking at the hood angles but I think it's neither here nor there. Pointing forward (as yours is) it is still at a non-matching angle to the hood crease.
Also, playing w/ the placement of the scoop, it seems to match pretty well depending on how you set it on the hood.
I still have to do the "yarn wind tunnel" to see how the air flows for exact placement. It's near the edge so I'm curious how the air flows here.
also a big thing stopping me is the thought of mounting my safari snorkel. If I do that, I don't want a scoop farm on the passenger side of the truck, might be too much... right now the safari snorkel is boosting the air intake of my bookshelf...
James-There is a guy here in Sacramento who does custom louvers. He's a high end custom body panel guy (makes Ferrari panels from scratch) that could do this for you. That would be pimpin' and look better than a hood scoop. You arn't driving a Camaro.
edit-If you are interested, contact jb welda, those guys are buds and he can put you in touch.
FWIW. I've noticed that wind blows water toward the front bumper...not toward the windshield like I expected...even at highway speeds. It does have one of plastic bug shields on it from the PO. This may have something to do with it. After washing it, I can't do the regular "spin cycle" around the block to get it to dry. There's always water left on the hood. I'd be interested to see the results of the yarn test. Take pics!
Romer,
still deciding on whether to do it.
I just ebay'd the scoop to have... it's clean and simple and the location above the exhaust manifold, I figure is a good place.
I also liked the fact it won't let in a lot of dirt/water.
I have this theory that the underhood airflow is not as good on a lifted truck. (see crappy drawing)
Stock- air flows under the front axle- creating a large, low pressure area for heat and air to escape the engine bay
Lifted- air flows above the axle creating a smaller low pressure area and possible turbulence to hinder proper evacuation of heat and air.
Andy,
yeah the louvres are a great idea... i will consider that too...
I have this theory that the underhood airflow is not as good on a lifted truck. (see crappy drawing)
Stock- air flows under the front axle- creating a large, low pressure area for heat and air to escape the engine bay
Lifted- air flows above the axle creating a smaller low pressure area and possible turbulence to hinder proper evacuation of heat and air.
3 words, "Carbon Fiber Hood" Lol...I'm surprised you don't have one yet Harry. It would look cool with the race clips and probably very light, but probably way to pricey. now you can bash and mock the idea.