Lpgc wrote:
I know of a couple of Nissan Elgrand engines that ate little steel screws that hold plenum flaps in place (flaps that alter airflow route in plenum, short route for high rpm, longer route for low rpm torque).. Six flaps on the V6 engine one for each cylinder (port runner in plenum), each flap is like a little throttle butterfly but performs the different function. One engine was destroyed, another ate the screws but seemed unaffected - I found the loose butterfly, it must have somehow gone against airflow direction and uphill in the plenum to come to rest on top of another butterfly for a different cylinder. Owner had me removed them all to prevent the same happening again, couldn't tell any difference driving the car afterwards but it'd probably be a couple of ft/lbs down on torque at low rpm. The flaps would be too wide to make it as far as the valves but the screws...
Sorry to bring other marques into discussion again, almost on topic though!
My ST170 had variable length intake runners too. You could really tell the difference when the control mechanism for it died and stopped working. It lost almost all of its low down torque.
It worked differently on that though, from what I can tell. IIRC it had some kind of rotating mechanism controlled by a box of electronics (the IMRC) rather than butterfly valves. When the engine exceeded a certain RPM the IMRC moved the bit in the intake manifold that lengthened the runners.
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