z1 zonly Posted March 3, 2016 Share Posted March 3, 2016 Hi all. I'm interested in drilling and epoxying/plastic welding/otherwise bonding injector bungs into a Porsche Cayenne manifold, which is made of plastic. I've Googled around and see that there's precedent for epoxying bungs into aluminum manifolds, but it's difficult to find for plastic. Is this a reasonable and safe exercise? Can i use any old aluminum injector bung, or should I make sure it's of a similar material? Here's a pic of the manifold in question: Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
LLave Posted March 3, 2016 Share Posted March 3, 2016 You may want to look into direct port nozzles, you can add fuel and nitrous to an existing injector bung. This would probable be more reliable than epoxy on relatively thin plastic. http://www.hotrod.com/how-to/engine/direct-port-nitrous-efi/ http://nitrousdirect.com/wetnitrouskits.html Good luck with your project. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
NewZed Posted March 3, 2016 Share Posted March 3, 2016 It's probably made of nylon or polypropylene, with glass fiber reinforcement. Difficult materials to adhere to. A mechanical fastening method might be better. You'll dull some tools on the glass, drilling holes. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
z1 zonly Posted March 3, 2016 Author Share Posted March 3, 2016 You may want to look into direct port nozzles, you can add fuel and nitrous to an existing injector bung. The difficult thing is that there are no injector bungs. These models had their injectors way down in the head and no bungs on the manifold. I need to add some for my project. It's probably made of nylon or polypropylene, with glass fiber reinforcement. Difficult materials to adhere to. A mechanical fastening method might be better. You'll dull some tools on the glass, drilling holes. Not sure I can get away with mechanical fastening, because I just don't know how much material there is to deal with, particularly at an angle to get injector spray parallel to the intake charge. It's a $300 gamble to get a manifold and find out. Argh... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
NewZed Posted March 3, 2016 Share Posted March 3, 2016 Actually, it looks like Loctite might have some good adhesives. Not epoxy, but cyano-acrylates, aka "super-glues". 401 looks like it might work. http://microfluidics.cnsi.ucsb.edu/processing/237471_LT2197_Plastic_Guide_v6_LR7911911.pdf http://www.na.henkel-adhesives.com/us/content_data/382071_LT3355_ASB_v19_2015.pdf Buy a cheaper manifold from a wrecking yard to practice on. Might not be exactly the same material but should have similar machining properties. Many later model cars have composite manifolds. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
LLave Posted March 3, 2016 Share Posted March 3, 2016 The difficult thing is that there are no injector bungs. These models had their injectors way down in the head and no bungs on the manifold. I need to add some for my project. Not sure I can get away with mechanical fastening, because I just don't know how much material there is to deal with, particularly at an angle to get injector spray parallel to the intake charge. It's a $300 gamble to get a manifold and find out. Argh... Perhaps you can epoxy resin a bit of a build-up in the location you want a nozzle, sand it flat, then use one of the threaded fogger nozzle mounts: http://www.amazon.com/NOS-17283NOS-Brass-Nozzle-Mounting/dp/B000COXFVU Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
z1 zonly Posted March 4, 2016 Author Share Posted March 4, 2016 Seems like about the same end result as bonding in a bung, no? And it'll be difficult to get a nut on the back side at a ~30-45deg angle to the runner. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tony D Posted March 8, 2016 Share Posted March 8, 2016 You need to determine the plastic used. It will be on a symbol on the manifold per CE recycling requirements. The issue is some plastics will 'weep' and any glue used on them will eventually lift. Like PE. In this case, you 'plastic weld' bungs of sufficient thickness and then drill/tap the manifold to accept what you want. Once you know what the manifold is made from, you can determine bonding and joining techniques. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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