Old60Driver
1983 K20 Silverado
- Joined
- May 17, 2020
- Posts
- 245
- Reaction score
- 306
- Location
- Houston
- First Name
- Michael
- Truck Year
- 1983
- Truck Model
- K20 Silverado
- Engine Size
- 350
Okay, let's go ahead and get this out of the way. I'm an idiot. There. Done. I said it.
So, six months ago, I purchased an intake. Specifically, an Edelbrock 2701 intake. I shipped it to a work site, opened it up, and oooh'd and aaaah'd at the finish. I packed it back up, and dropped it off back at the house with future plans to install it. Fast forward to today. I finally go some time at home base to tinker. Today was intake and dress up kit day.
I grab the aforementioned intake, wipe the dust off, and open the box. THIS time, I actually look at the damned thing. It's for a square bore. Ummm, I'm still running, and plan on continuing to run, a Q-jet. (remember my first sentence?) While it's obviously my own fault, I DID call Summit before I ordered, and they recommended this intake based on what I told them. Like, what carb I was putting on it. Anyway, I called Summit up, and they took care of me. I'm still out 18 bones for shipping, but better than eating the cost of an intake I bought almost six months ago.
If you're still here, thanks. So here's the issue. In my frantic research in the last few minutes on an acceptable intake to put on my K20, I found SEVERAL online references that indicate for LOW RPM applications (below 4500), that the stock intakes were not only as good as the aftermarket aluminum jobs, but in many cases BETTER! Cliff Ruggles swears by the old, heavy cast iron jobs. Mentions past dynos and what-not. And he's not the only one.
Given that I don't ever really plan on getting north of 4500 RPMs, is the 250 bones for a new intake worth it? I'm really only after low end grunt for some weekend fun. Or should I just clean up my existing manifold, give her some nice paint, and call it good? For the record, it hasn't been a wasted exercise, as my intake gaskets were in not so bueno shape, and may have been leaking a tad.
Anyway, thanks for reading, and hopefully I'm not opening a can of worms here!
Cheers!
So, six months ago, I purchased an intake. Specifically, an Edelbrock 2701 intake. I shipped it to a work site, opened it up, and oooh'd and aaaah'd at the finish. I packed it back up, and dropped it off back at the house with future plans to install it. Fast forward to today. I finally go some time at home base to tinker. Today was intake and dress up kit day.
I grab the aforementioned intake, wipe the dust off, and open the box. THIS time, I actually look at the damned thing. It's for a square bore. Ummm, I'm still running, and plan on continuing to run, a Q-jet. (remember my first sentence?) While it's obviously my own fault, I DID call Summit before I ordered, and they recommended this intake based on what I told them. Like, what carb I was putting on it. Anyway, I called Summit up, and they took care of me. I'm still out 18 bones for shipping, but better than eating the cost of an intake I bought almost six months ago.
If you're still here, thanks. So here's the issue. In my frantic research in the last few minutes on an acceptable intake to put on my K20, I found SEVERAL online references that indicate for LOW RPM applications (below 4500), that the stock intakes were not only as good as the aftermarket aluminum jobs, but in many cases BETTER! Cliff Ruggles swears by the old, heavy cast iron jobs. Mentions past dynos and what-not. And he's not the only one.
Given that I don't ever really plan on getting north of 4500 RPMs, is the 250 bones for a new intake worth it? I'm really only after low end grunt for some weekend fun. Or should I just clean up my existing manifold, give her some nice paint, and call it good? For the record, it hasn't been a wasted exercise, as my intake gaskets were in not so bueno shape, and may have been leaking a tad.
Anyway, thanks for reading, and hopefully I'm not opening a can of worms here!
Cheers!