I have seen these on a site before and I would like to make my own. Anyone remember where this info is or happen to have it handy?
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Take your BACV off and outline it on your material, then go from there..
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Originally Posted by ColinRX7' date='Apr 23 2004, 12:39 PM
Take your BACV off and outline it on your material, then go from there..
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Originally Posted by roadkill669' date='Apr 23 2004, 12:42 PM
exactlly. Or use the gasket if it comes off ok
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I knew I could do that. I would like to have the dimensions so I can build the part while my car is still functioning. Also so I can make a new gasket cause it is cheaper than buying a new one.
Anyone have the dimensions? |
BACV removal takes about 10 minutes tops, with minimal coolant spilling. Two bolts. I've done many, not once has the gasket torn on me when removing it. If you are just putting the same one back on, then you don't need a new gasket if you take it off.
If you are worried about it, when you take the old one off, cut a new gasket out of a corn flakes box. It's just a tiny intake gasket. Pull it off, trace it, put it back on, drive the car again while you make the blockoff for it. |
What is the BACV?
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Bypass Air Control Valve
Electronically controlled valve that lets air bypass the throttle plates depending on electrical load (for maintaining steady idle). |
Mine has been blocked off. No air compressor either. What are the advantages?
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Cleaner engine bay?
I can't figure out why people want to keep blocking them off. All it's going to do is hurt you idle speed, or make it inconsistant. Unless you have a racecar and no electrical load (such as lights, wipers, etc.) |
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