Dirtybob
Junior Member
- Joined
- Nov 26, 2017
- Messages
- 174
- Reaction score
- 54
- Points
- 28
- Buick Ownership
- 95 RMS
yesis this what we are talking about..?
yesis this what we are talking about..?
drove that car to the shop today.. it ran fine..
IRT ICM, will look when i check on the car wednesday.. and take pix..The ICM should be located on the drivers side cylinder head.
Interesting that your '92 feels more "enthusiastic", suspect it's the gearing. Pretty sure the LT1 wagons (most commonly) got 2.9x in the rear. No question the LT1 makes more power but they aren't exactly known for their low end grunt.
3.42 or shorter gears and a ~10" converter will make a big difference. Just the gears helps a little but was unimpressed when swapping from 2.56 to 3.42 in my sedan (while keeping the stock converter). Not everyone likes driving a car with a loose converter either. Using a light foot can make the car feel sluggish, depending on the converter used, and the car will be louder by virtue of turning more rpm when accelerating from low speed.
That Track is about 14 miles from my location here in Floriduh. Is that Wagon owner a Local? would love to see his carsAn old dragstrip aquaintance used to race an LT1 wagon. Unsure what was done to the motor but it ran low 14s on the engine with around a 2.0 60' time. IIRC it had 4.10s in the rear and was not on the stock converter. It ran 12.0x on a smallish (150-175 hp wet shot) dose of nitrous with about 1.80 on the 60'. I recall wondering "why is he putting on a helmet for a low 14 sec. pass?"
it ran a lot like this car:
interesting mods on that engine and yes i can see something behind the blue valve on the black vacuum hose..The car in the vid was not the car I was talking about, it just ran similar 1/4 mile times. Car in vid was a bit prettier than my friends car (stumbled onto it via youtube). My friend's car looked exactly like your 92, much to the chagrin of pretentious types at the track. Some folks get butt hurt when they lose to something that's not shiny...
Your pics above are of the MAP sensor, the ICM is on the front of the drivers side cylinder head from the factory. Look underneath the intake tube.
ICM visible at top left of pic:
View attachment 32465
abs? antilock brake..? ac? air conditioning..? depends on your local weather and if you are using this as a driver rather than just to run a 1/4 mile..I deleted the abs & ac (neither of them worked right anyways), air pump/tubing plus the egr (no provision for it on those headers). Definitely declutters the engine bay a bit. That header has to come off to change the #6 plug.
my buicks are NOT beaters.. they are worth the effort..That car started out as my kid's car until it was too big & ugly for him. Then it went back to me.
I like to bracket race daily drivers sometimes, got over the load it on the trailer and haul it to the track thing many years ago. It can become a second job (and a money pit). I go to the track to have fun and if I win a few that's just icing on the cake.
Pic of me about to get spanked by a front engine dragster (test & tune session)
View attachment 32483
Air Conditioning is nice (not worth the price tag on an old beater IMO) and the antilock brakes (abs) are way overrated on B bodies. As are rear disc brakes (unless maybe your running laps at Road America). Heresy? perhaps.
Didn't take me long to get tired of 2.56 gears on a car I mainly drive in town. Still managed to average 22 mpg on a 1920 mile road trip with the 3.42s.
The headers went on when I couldn't find a drivers side exhaust manifold anywhere. I was actually impressed with them since they only cost $90 and were almost a direct fit plus they sealed way better than any of the cheap ass hedman/hooker/etc.
Is that Mercedes one of those 12 sec. cars? Maybe chage the licnese plate to L84BNG0 😛
“Ponderous” what a fantastic way to describe most newer vehicles. Even the Series II 3800 I had seemed that way compared to the earlier Series I, despite the II supposed to have an extra 35 horses. Gearing I guess. But I often find newer vehicles (probably using a sensor instead of a throttle cable) to feel almost gutless like that unless you floor it, in which case you get too much power all of a sudden.drove that car to the shop today.. it ran fine..
needs new mufflers.
A/C is kaput so it needs a new compressor ++.. saw the ICM on the top of the engine.. easy to swap if needed.. your suggestion to raise it off the intake manifold is an easy thing to accomplish and a good idea unless in interferes with the stock air cleaner..
so left the car for those jobs + add an electric fan and remove the mechanical fan..
maybe i post some pix of this particular car when i get it back in the next few days..
i must add, here, that in my opinion, so far, i like my '92 better than the 2 '95's..
the '92 seems to be much more enthusiastic and just jumps while the 2 '95's seem a little more ponderous and for sure more complex with the optispark thing..
i would describe most new car models boring in their sameness.. no character.. just another amorphic blob with a wheel at each compass point.. 🙂“Ponderous” what a fantastic way to describe most newer vehicles. Even the Series II 3800 I had seemed that way compared to the earlier Series I, despite the II supposed to have an extra 35 horses. Gearing I guess. But I often find newer vehicles (probably using a sensor instead of a throttle cable) to feel almost gutless like that unless you floor it, in which case you get too much power all of a sudden.
i'll take a picture on monday if they have not added the two additional mufflers or resonators or whatever.. there are no cats on the car presently and i have no intention of adding cats..This is the stock duel exhaust system! Two cats, two mufflers & 2-resonators. Do not restrict the flow of the exhaust with 2-mufflers.
https://www.wholesalegmpartsonline.com/images/parts/gm/fullsize/930907MB03-030.JPG