Hello all, and Happy New Year....
I wanted to take this opportunity to thank everyone who replied and visited this post. All of your input has been filed and will becme a part of what will drive my 2005 efforts within the nitrous business.
John, I would like to offer a couple of comments on what and who makes the best nozzle in the industry. I think the best nozzle is the one that has the best flow rate capability for your particular application. The internal architecture of most of the nozzles on the market today are fairly similar and there seems to be what you could say is a 2 style of nozzle industry right now. One being the point of confluence style or flow intersection type in that the nozzle brings the nitrous and the fuel together away from the exit orifice of the nozzle and the other style brings the nitrous and fuel together at the nozzle itself. Both have thier dissadvantages and advantages.
My nozzle research is a little old as I stopped working on some new nozzle technology a while back. I am concentrating on plates for the immediate future. But, here is my opinion... and we all know what an opinion is worth.
I like the style of nozzle that offers seperate exits from the nozzle for both the fuel and nitrous. This flys in the face of my original brand X nozzle that was what I called the shrouded exit nozzle. I like this style of nozzle (separate exits) because (again, in my opinion and without what I would consider to be up to the minute research) with a dedicated exit, each of the fliuds "feel" less of what the other is doing until it is under the influence of the port flow and not the flow of each of the nitrous or fuel. Does that make sense? in other words, I am not a big fan of tring to accelerate the fuel exiting a nozzle because of nitrous flow. In other words, shearing the fuel away from the nozzle (at least how everyone does it now) is not in my opinion not the "hot lick".
Remember, I am not trying to be politically correct here when I say, pick the nozzle you will use because of the company or brand of components you are planning to run not because of the claims associated about the nozzle itself. This way, the technical support you need to optimise your combination will be there and not leaving you in the dark over a combination question. Obviously, your tuner and or nirtous system supplier will have a lot to say about a choice of nozzle based on his or her point of view and practical experiance.
While I am not currently offering any components for sale into the marketplace, I always enjoy talking about anything that you might think I can help with. Please contact me at
parts2race@msn.com or at 562-863-7624. I hope this helps a little.
Thanks again,
Butch Schrier