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Tunnel Ram ( Novice questions )

Discussion in 'The Hokey Ass Message Board' started by GatorRacer, Aug 7, 2013.

  1. GatorRacer
    Joined: May 27, 2011
    Posts: 24

    GatorRacer
    Member
    from Greer SC

    I am considering buying the tunnel ram pictured here. It is and Edlebrock TR1 Dual Quad. Can anyone offer me a little advice on the mistake I am about to make.

    I have a 350ci with a 350 turbo tranny. Running 3:55 gears with a 26" tall drag radial. Camel back heads with the big valves. Hydraulic cam with 650 lift. Holley 650 carb. Block hugger headers with thrust master exhaust.

    Will the tunnel ram be streetable on this motor? What my I expect for difficulties tuning, driving, etc? I run this car mostly on the road but it does get ran down the 1/8th mile when the opportunity arises. My intention for the car is to more aggressive than a normal street car. I want it to be more of an 1/8 mile car i take down the road.

    In the future I am building a 327 from my dirt track racing experience that will have very light internals and hi rev capability. Will this intake suit that better or worse?


    Thanks for you advice! I want to get some idea what I might be getting my self into.
     

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  2. daveymac405
    Joined: Jun 14, 2010
    Posts: 94

    daveymac405
    Member

    the worst problem i have had with my tunnel ram on the street would be that it has frozen off once or twice in the cool early morning if i had not warmed it up properly prior to leaving the house. :D
     
  3. Kcarey
    Joined: Jul 26, 2012
    Posts: 16

    Kcarey
    Member

    I have a 302 ford with a tunnel ram. It has 450 holleys, aluminum heads 471 lift cam, and .40 over with a c4, 372 gear with 30" cheaters and mine does great. Drive it everywhere ImageUploadedByH.A.M.B.1375891595.926606.jpg


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  4. the plenum on that is very very large - maybe look at a more streetable design and save yourself many headaches
     
  5. Pro Shifted
    Joined: May 18, 2010
    Posts: 51

    Pro Shifted
    Member


    and the runners look very short
     
  6. kismyss
    Joined: Jan 12, 2011
    Posts: 65

    kismyss
    Member

    I have that exact same tunnel ram on my 327 in my 37 GMC. Double hump heads, mild cam, zoomies, 390 cfm holleys, petronix breakerless ignition, 4.88 gears and a 700r4 trans. Couldn't be happier with the performance. Not alot of bottom end but the 4.88s get it goin. The 390 holleys arn't bad to tune but I recommend a quick change vaccum secondary spring kit. So you can dial in when your secondaries open up easier. If I idle around alot it will load up, but just rap up the rpms a few times and its ready to go. I ran the tr1 just for nostalgia purposes. Built a 60s era engine and that tunnel ram was edelbrocks first one. You can polish the sides of the box fairly easily and it will look nice. Hope this helps.
     
  7. Deuces
    Joined: Nov 3, 2009
    Posts: 25,113

    Deuces

    That's a '70's style Pro-Stock intake... Not for street use...
     
  8. bobby_Socks
    Joined: Apr 12, 2006
    Posts: 938

    bobby_Socks
    Member
    from ǑǃƕǑ

    Is that a mistake on the Cam lift 650 ?
     
  9. raidmagic
    Joined: Dec 10, 2007
    Posts: 1,440

    raidmagic
    Member

    I had this set up in my t bucket, went down the road nice. Fired right up, little to no warm up, put it in gear and go. I am now putting that motor in my other car but without the tunnel ram. I don't want to cut the hood.


    [​IMG]
     
  10. Fenders
    Joined: Sep 8, 2007
    Posts: 3,921

    Fenders
    Member

    I like the tall tunnel ram, but either way with 2 fours, use small carbs as Kcarey did, they'll be plenty.
     
  11. olskoolspeed
    Joined: Mar 2, 2009
    Posts: 476

    olskoolspeed
    Member
    from Ohio

    That type of tunnel ram had the issue of "puddling" gas on the floor of the plenum. Look inside and you'll see how it can happen. They have gone BOOM before.
     
  12. outlaw256
    Joined: Jun 26, 2008
    Posts: 2,022

    outlaw256
    Member

    ive run that ram on the street a long time ago.but I did use small carbs.i have 2 cars now we run on the street with t rams. no trouble at all.that t ram you got aint bad on the street but they do make ones more street friendly..
     
  13. Al Napier
    Joined: Feb 6, 2007
    Posts: 400

    Al Napier
    Member
    from Central CT

    That thing has a H U G E plenum! I personally like tunnel rams but (especially with an automatic) I'd find something with longer runners and a *much* smaller plenum if I were you.

    A pair of old 660 center squirters up top and some 4:11's in the rear and you'd be good to go, just not with that particular intake pictured :)

    Al in TN
     
  14. we filled the lower half extending the runners, reshaped the entry for better flow two 600's needs more gear, as far as building a 327 go with more cubes and call it a 327
     
  15. One more thing to think about is your gearing - as some others noted, deeper rear axle gears are typically more forgiving, allowing the engine to get up on the cam and get some air flow through that huge plenum.
     
  16. Gene Boul
    Joined: Feb 9, 2006
    Posts: 805

    Gene Boul

    Typically the plenum was the size (volume) of two clyinders worth. i.e if you have a 327 CI motor than two cly = 81 cubic inches. That was suggested to me by Vic Edelbrock 35 years ago. I took it to mean minimium. I was cutting off the top of the first design shoebox manifold so that I could mount a blower. Regardless, I would probably "devcon" the floor to eliminate puddling and run that puppy!
     
  17. We ran one of these when they first came out.
    As stated earlier these manifolds have a very large plenum, we did the same, used epoxy to fill the lower section ,which gave longer runners, and smaller plenum.
    This is what Edelbrock and Weiand did on there next version.
    I have ran a tunnel ram on race cars and street cars both,using the Holley 450's and 660's
    I prefer the 660's
    Speedy
     
  18. henryj1951
    Joined: Sep 23, 2012
    Posts: 2,306

    henryj1951
    Member
    from USA

    as said before^ fill the bottom with epoxy, I/we also used anti-reversion plates.


    :cool:
     
  19. I run the next "evolved" design after that one and some people still says it has to much plenum volume


    [​IMG]
     
  20. Lokii
    Joined: Nov 11, 2011
    Posts: 8

    Lokii
    Member
    from San Diego

    Hello, great thread here. I was following this thread last year and finally decided to add a tunnel ram to my engine too. I'm a novice as well, and have searched the Hamb forums for some answers to my questions but didn't find any.

    So here's my question: if I'm buying a used tunnel ram (on a budget as always), how do I know it will fit my engine?
    The seller says his Weiand tunnel ram was on a sbc 350, 1972 El Camino. I have a sbc 350, 1990 Camaro. Will that tunnel ram fit on a newer engine?

    Any advice is greatly appreciated.

    Thanks everyone.

    Lokii
     
  21. tfeverfred
    Joined: Nov 11, 2006
    Posts: 15,788

    tfeverfred
    Member Emeritus

    I've always admired a tunnel ram on a street car, but as mentioned, power on the lower end and carb selection separated the good examples from the "not really" crowd. It's good to see some guys figured it out.
     
  22. you have the vortech heads? look at the way the intake mounts to the block. The bolts can go straight down into the block or to the side at an angle.
     
  23. Dynaflash_8
    Joined: Sep 24, 2008
    Posts: 3,038

    Dynaflash_8
    Member
    from Auburn WA

    Ran a weiand tunnel on a 283 with 2-600 afbs ( yes 2 ) big solid cam and good heads. Would load up on the bottom but screamed past 3 grand. Had too much carb and not enough vacuum, but I drove it like I stole it. Here's my new motor.

    ImageUploadedByH.A.M.B.1391118141.288989.jpg


    Sent via my typewriter
     
  24. Lokii
    Joined: Nov 11, 2011
    Posts: 8

    Lokii
    Member
    from San Diego

    @pdunn10
    I think you mean the intake bolts in at an angle, older heads bolt in straight right? I don't have an answer right now, will find out later this evening when I get out of work. Thanks for the advice, I'll report back.
     
  25. Yes, the bolts on the intake manifold changed in the late 80's you can add a shim if you need to. We have done that with TPI set ups


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  26. willo_96
    Joined: Nov 5, 2013
    Posts: 78

    willo_96
    Member

    Do it, I have a tunnel ram on my 302 windsor, and despite the fact everyone said it would be no good it works great, it's on a fairly mild motor, it's got 289 heads with a bit of work, 10:1 comp, fairly mild hydraulic cam, and twin 600 vac sec holleys, which everyone said would also not work. Starts great, idles when cold, I've got a auto with a 2500 stall and it pulls at those revs no problem, every one that's had problems with them must be doing something very wrong. ImageUploadedByH.A.M.B.1391127577.192095.jpg
     
  27. captmullette
    Joined: Oct 15, 2009
    Posts: 1,929

    captmullette
    Member

    I run an offy tunnel on my 355 sbc 650 lift dirt track cam, small valve double hump heads single AED 750 double pumper on amotor set up in the 80;s for 3/8 mile dirt track car,11.90 in the 1/4, street legal 3.73 gear , just got to play with the carb, oh yea 3500 stall;;;;;
     
  28. Lokii
    Joined: Nov 11, 2011
    Posts: 8

    Lokii
    Member
    from San Diego

    Ok, I'm finally replying a bit late. After trolling through a bunch of camaro, 4x4 and hot rodding forums and taking a close look at the engine I'm working with, I figured out that the Weiand tunnel ram I was interested in will actually fit, but only after making a couple of small adjustments. Also, I do not have Vortec Heads on my engine, apparently those did not come out until 1996 (some argue 1994 for some Corvettes - either way my 1990 Camaro engine doesn't have them).

    Just as @pdunn10 mentioned above, the intake patterns changed in the 80s and I will need a few shims for the middle bolts within the pattern. Those middle bolts go in flush with heads, whereas the rest of the bolts go in at an an angle. In order for the tunnel ram to sit right, I'm going to have to drill out the middle holes a bit so the bolts can go straight down into the block. Luckily, Holley sells wedge shaped washers (shims) for this sort of thing.

    I haven't actually done the work yet, just finished all the research. Here are links to everything I used in case anyone cares to read up on it. I'm hoping to get started in a few weeks when my work schedule lightens up.

    Thanks again for all the help everyone.

    How to tell if you have Vortec Heads:
    http://www.chevymania.com/tech/vortec.htm

    Cross referencing numbers for SBC small blocks
    http://outintheshop.com/faq/casting/heads.html

    Converting TBI intake to carb (with pictures!)
    http://67-72chevytrucks.com/vboard/showthread.php?p=4944205
     
  29. stang484
    Joined: Oct 22, 2011
    Posts: 7

    stang484
    Member
    from atlanta

    I think Edelbrock makes what they call a street tunnel ram I had one on a big block and it worked great but like others said it has long runners and small plenum trying to change mixture quickly in that big plenum might be tough
     
  30. redlinetoys
    Joined: May 18, 2004
    Posts: 4,302

    redlinetoys
    Member
    from Midwest

    I would recommend those asking questions do a few searches. There are more than a few lengthy threads regarding both cross rams and tunnel rams with much good info.

    You will hear a lot of pro and con with these questions. Most of the naysayers are from one of two camps. Either they are serious engine guys who know that in most cases a street engine will perform better all around with a different intake, and they are right... Or the naysayers are guys who have no idea what they are talking about and they are just spouting off what they have heard.

    Personally, I ran a big TR1 tunnel ram on the street for years on a little 283 with mostly stock internals, 2 Holley 600 carbs, 3.73 gears and a 4 Spd. That was my daily and I drove it through multiple Midwest winters every day. Pump the gas, light it up and drive it. That car took me from Indy to Ft Lauderdale for more than several spring breaks.

    Today I has a more radical 358 sbc with a .560 lift solid cam, Dart heads, good compression, 2 edelbrock 500 carbs, a 4 Spd and 4.88 gears. Absolutely great fun all the way from idle through 7500 rpm. 20 degrees initial advance and 40 degrees all in. I don't drive this one every day, but I could.

    Either way you will be changing plugs much more often and tinkering with it to keep it happy, but I don't mind.




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