Alternative Vacuum Source?

PostPost by: Tmac897 » Thu Apr 25, 2024 9:26 pm

When I was rebuilding the engine of my S3, I had to replace the head. I wasn't remotely thinking about headlight operation at that stage of the rebuild, and so I did not drill out a port on the intake manifold to fit a connection to the vaccum system. Drilling a hole in the head at this point gives me the willies - I can see the metal filings complete with evil grins happily marching into cylinder 1. :twisted:

My question is would the airbox itself be a reliable source of vacuum? Other unintended consequences?
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PostPost by: h20hamelan » Thu Apr 25, 2024 10:43 pm

I believe there are 12v electric pumps
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PostPost by: Tmac897 » Thu Apr 25, 2024 10:56 pm

h20hamelan wrote:I believe there are 12v electric pumps


Yes, and there are 12v electric actuators. Not my question, though. The airbox connection, if viable, presents a much simpler solution.
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PostPost by: h20hamelan » Thu Apr 25, 2024 11:30 pm

sure, until you have low vacuum while running which is I believe why folk use electric motors to actuate the pods.

while pumps may be actuators, actuators may be pumps. I don't think either statement is true.
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PostPost by: steve lyle » Fri Apr 26, 2024 1:02 am

I wouldn’t think there is much, if any, vacuum upstream of the throttle plates.
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PostPost by: quaybook » Fri Apr 26, 2024 7:30 am

Maybe remove front carb, put a grease covered rag with an extractor string attached to it down the port beyond where you are going to drill to block the port, then a second grease covered rag behind the point where you are going to drill. Drill out the port, remove the outer rag carefully hopefully with all the swarf, clean up inner end of drilling, then very carefully remove the inner rag. Maybe?

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PostPost by: alanr » Fri Apr 26, 2024 8:04 am

You could of course fit an electric headlight conversion.
Or fit a strong vacuum pump like one of these. Seems very overkill to me though.
https://www.carbuilder.com/uk/electric-vacuum-pump

Realistically though I don't think you have any option but drill the manifold if you want vacuum.
As others have suggested, plenty of grease both inside and outside the manifold to catch the drill swarf and take a deep breath and drill/tap the manifold seems the easiest solution to me. It would be done in minutes.

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PostPost by: rgh0 » Fri Apr 26, 2024 2:21 pm

quaybook wrote:Maybe remove front carb, put a grease covered rag with an extractor string attached to it down the port beyond where you are going to drill to block the port, then a second grease covered rag behind the point where you are going to drill. Drill out the port, remove the outer rag carefully hopefully with all the swarf, clean up inner end of drilling, then very carefully remove the inner rag. Maybe?

Vernon



I did this on a head that I also fitted before realising the vacuum connction had not been drilled and tapped. No problems with extracting all the metal filings. Turn the engine until the inlet valve is closed on No1 cylinder and you can always vacuum out any metal that mat get past the plugs in the inlet.

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PostPost by: Tmac897 » Fri Apr 26, 2024 3:15 pm

rgh0 wrote:
quaybook wrote:Maybe remove front carb, put a grease covered rag with an extractor string attached to it down the port beyond where you are going to drill to block the port, then a second grease covered rag behind the point where you are going to drill. Drill out the port, remove the outer rag carefully hopefully with all the swarf, clean up inner end of drilling, then very carefully remove the inner rag. Maybe?

Vernon



I did this on a head that I also fitted before realising the vacuum connction had not been drilled and tapped. No problems with extracting all the metal filings. Turn the engine until the inlet valve is closed on No1 cylinder and you can always vacuum out any metal that mat get past the plugs in the inlet.

cheers
Rohan


Thank you for the suggestions. Sounds doable.
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PostPost by: The Veg » Mon Apr 29, 2024 1:22 am

I say this tongue-in-cheek of course, but if you wanted to get REALLY crazy you could acquire the vacuum-pump from a Turbo Esprit, which is rather compact and driven by a V-belt. Having a pressurised intake manifold, those cars needed a vacuum-pump to operate the brake servo. And when I had a Turbo Esprit some years ago, that pump was a right pain in the arse to loosen and remove its belt, which was the outer-most of THREE V-belts on the engine and the pump was so far down that it had to be dealt with from below the car, and it required a modified hex-key to loosen a bolt behind its pulley, in a difficult place to reach. If I still had that car I'd yank it off and GIVE you that damn pump! :lol:
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PostPost by: rjaxe » Mon Apr 29, 2024 6:09 am

My plus 2 has two vacuum connections on the intake one for the lights the other for the brake servo are you missing this one as well?
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PostPost by: shynsy » Mon Apr 29, 2024 6:16 am

I believe that you can buy an alternator which has a vacuum pump integrated into the housing.
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PostPost by: Tmac897 » Mon Apr 29, 2024 10:32 am

rjaxe wrote:My plus 2 has two vacuum connections on the intake one for the lights the other for the brake servo are you missing this one as well?


I have an S3 SE, but no servo fitted. Perhaps the original owner removed it, or it was a "delete" option on the SE?
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PostPost by: Tmac897 » Mon Apr 29, 2024 10:33 am

The Veg wrote:I say this tongue-in-cheek of course, but if you wanted to get REALLY crazy you could acquire the vacuum-pump from a Turbo Esprit, which is rather compact and driven by a V-belt. Having a pressurised intake manifold, those cars needed a vacuum-pump to operate the brake servo. And when I had a Turbo Esprit some years ago, that pump was a right pain in the arse to loosen and remove its belt, which was the outer-most of THREE V-belts on the engine and the pump was so far down that it had to be dealt with from below the car, and it required a modified hex-key to loosen a bolt behind its pulley, in a difficult place to reach. If I still had that car I'd yank it off and GIVE you that damn pump! :lol:


Probably beyond my fabrication skills anyway :)
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PostPost by: Tmac897 » Mon Apr 29, 2024 10:35 am

shynsy wrote:I believe that you can buy an alternator which has a vacuum pump integrated into the housing.
Tim


Thanks, Tim. Sounds like a reasonable option. Does it require a change to negative ground to install an alternator?
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