I am designing an airbox for the Specialist Components EFI kit (I bought it as a replacement for my HIF44). I have two simple reasons:
- Reduce induction noise in the cabin
- Have cold air enter the engine
The factory setup is as follows: the throttle body has a trumpet, which has a flange with threaded holes. The airfilter backplate is mounted to this flange by screws that go into the treaded holes of the flange. The foam ITG filter is then mounted to the backplate using a clamping mechanism. As discussed, this will be removed, which leaves me with the flange.
I designed an airbox with a 51mm inlet (my throttle body is 45mm), that mounts to the flange. Mounting it is the real challenge, also because of the lack of space. I considered several options:
- Have an access hole from the back of the airbox (firewall side) that would give access to the screws. The hole would then be closed by a screw-on circular lid. This is my current test design and I already discovered that mounting the screws is a real challenge due to lack of space and angle at which the allen key needs to be held.
- Screws that go completely through the airbox from the backside with a support tube. That has two potential downsides: bad access and obstruction of airflow.
- Bore out the threads in the flange, create hexagonal spaces in the airbox to put nuts at the inside of the ring that faces the flange of the trumpet, screw from the outside (throttle body side).
I provided pictures below of my latest prototype.
I need help! Does anyone have clever ideas on how to improve, other than the ideas I listed above?
Note: the screws in the picture are inside of the metal thread of the flange and just hold the airbox in place because it hangs on the screws. Don’t think I already fixed it
.
Also: the Mini name on the airbox will improve and match the actual font/style. This was just a test to see if I could emboss letters. I’m still a novice with 3d design…
Edited by fokko, Today, 08:17 AM.












