Conquest Intercooler
Conquest Intercooler
I'm looking at fitting an Intercooler from an Astron powered conquest into my non intercooled SOHC 4g63. Does this fit straight in, or are the intercoolers that came standard with the sirius engine, different than those that came with the astron?
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- G33Kz0r
- Posts: 2674
- Joined: Thu Nov 27, 2003 1:26 pm
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The american widebody conquest/starion intercoolers are the same as late model japanese/european/new zealdn starion intercoolers, which were mounted vertically. The early model jap ones were mounted horizontally.
You'll also need an intercooled model compressor cover for the turbo.
Your non-intercooled radiator overflow bottle will also be in the way, you can move it to the cavity behind the nose-cone panel.
Your radiator support panel will also require cutting to get the intercooler pipes through, as these were different between non intercooled and intercooled models also.
Depending on whether your car has an oil-cooler or not, you may have to shuffle these lines around a bit aswell, this is also true for the power steering cooler lines.
It's not actually as much work as that makes it sound, once you get started you'll see how it all fits together.
You'll also need an intercooled model compressor cover for the turbo.
Your non-intercooled radiator overflow bottle will also be in the way, you can move it to the cavity behind the nose-cone panel.
Your radiator support panel will also require cutting to get the intercooler pipes through, as these were different between non intercooled and intercooled models also.
Depending on whether your car has an oil-cooler or not, you may have to shuffle these lines around a bit aswell, this is also true for the power steering cooler lines.
It's not actually as much work as that makes it sound, once you get started you'll see how it all fits together.
Hope these help. I used most of the original pipework but did have to add a couple of pieces to get it to work. I did not have to move the power steering cooler lines or the support for the bonnet catch. And some thug had already cut the radiator support panel and made the hole larger.
I used a silicone elbow from the turbo outlet, I had to trim the heat shield a little for clearance. I aslo machined up an adaptor to mate the elbow with the factory rubber pipe.
The two pipes on the intercooler are joined together with a piece of aluminium. I had to cut this to spread the pipes out a little to clear stuff and get pipework in. I made a piece that I riveted in between support it again once I knew where everything needed to be.
Had to make hanging brackets for the intercooler to mount on, just a couple of bits of aluminium angle. Left hand bracket is bolted where the tow hook is (tow hook sits behind it) Right bracket has two bolts and nuts that go through the chassis rail. You can get inside the rail and do them up tight.
I used both original crossover pipes to get into the throttle body (JA one and Conquest one) Cut them both in half (after measuring) and used a left over piece of rubber hose to join the two together. I had to file the edges of the JA crossover as it has a seam running down both sides.
I used a silicone elbow from the turbo outlet, I had to trim the heat shield a little for clearance. I aslo machined up an adaptor to mate the elbow with the factory rubber pipe.
The two pipes on the intercooler are joined together with a piece of aluminium. I had to cut this to spread the pipes out a little to clear stuff and get pipework in. I made a piece that I riveted in between support it again once I knew where everything needed to be.
Had to make hanging brackets for the intercooler to mount on, just a couple of bits of aluminium angle. Left hand bracket is bolted where the tow hook is (tow hook sits behind it) Right bracket has two bolts and nuts that go through the chassis rail. You can get inside the rail and do them up tight.
I used both original crossover pipes to get into the throttle body (JA one and Conquest one) Cut them both in half (after measuring) and used a left over piece of rubber hose to join the two together. I had to file the edges of the JA crossover as it has a seam running down both sides.
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- Austarion Occupant
- Posts: 3578
- Joined: Tue Apr 06, 2004 1:21 pm
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It's nice to see everyone's different ideas.
What turbo is it Al? You've done well...completely hidden the wastegate actuator and managed to jam both cooler hoses through the radiator support and still retain the factory airbox position.
Are you hiding the cooler behind a standard JA/B spoiler, a JD/GSRV one or something custom?
What turbo is it Al? You've done well...completely hidden the wastegate actuator and managed to jam both cooler hoses through the radiator support and still retain the factory airbox position.
Are you hiding the cooler behind a standard JA/B spoiler, a JD/GSRV one or something custom?
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Not sure what the turbo is, it's on my list to find out. I think it's a Nissan one, T28 maybe...I'll find some numbers on it one day and work it out.
The stock hoses run that way and wrap around the air box. I assume US/JD cars have a larger hole in the radiator support to fit it all.
I will be using a Redzone spoiler when it can be made, JA chin spoiler don't work without me relocating the cooler forwards and up to clear it. I also have the BOV in some of the pipework that sits behind the bumper, so it won't attract any unwanted attention
The stock hoses run that way and wrap around the air box. I assume US/JD cars have a larger hole in the radiator support to fit it all.
I will be using a Redzone spoiler when it can be made, JA chin spoiler don't work without me relocating the cooler forwards and up to clear it. I also have the BOV in some of the pipework that sits behind the bumper, so it won't attract any unwanted attention
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