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swartlkk -> RE: My 89 Blazer (4/7/2008 7:50:28 AM)
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quote:
ORIGINAL: BlazerSS Once again, here comes some clarification on the topic of Throttle Body Spacers. I think that Swart has explained this in about 20 different threads if only the search button would get used. IF your 89 Blazer is a TBI motor which I am assuming it is, then you should see some small Torque and mpg increase. As for the K&N filter, if you just get a panel drop-in filter then yes that will help a tad as well. However if you get a K&N that is open to the underhood environment, then you will see performance decrease rather than increase. Throttle Body Spacers only make a positive difference on TBI or Carb motors only. The last statement isn't entirely true. A spacer can help in a vehicle with a relatively high RPM at the torque peak. Increased intake runner length lowers the RPM at which peak torque occurs at the expense of high RPM power. As I have said in other posts on this subject, I had good results using spacers on my old '94 3.5L Intrepid (sequential port fuel injection). I designed them and had them made at a fraction of the cost of what the big name places charge. With the 4.3L engine (pick any one of them), they already has a very low peak torque RPM. To move this peak closer to idle would not really gain you much with the setup of the rest of the drivetrain (torque converter lock up RPM, gear ratios, etc). You really have to know where you are starting from to know if a spacer will be beneficial.
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