Pickles954
Junior Member


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Wrong. Seen plenty of quick all motor builds with nitrous, quick without, and quicker with.Quoted post[/post]]
first of all, why are you so set on nitrous? you can't do an all motor build then add the nitrous. you would have to build a motor for just the nitrous, but then when you weren't spraying, it wouldn't be that quick.
Not hard to build from what I've seen, at least doing it the right way and sleeving it, but definitely more expensive.second, NA h22's are hard and expensive to build. you could get more reliability for a hell of a lot cheaper by adding a turbo or supercharger. for cost efficiency and ease of build, stay away from all motor. especially with the h22. it's extremely expensive.
third, why buy a new motor just to build your old one? 113,000 miles isn't that much for a honda. if you want to do a full build, just buy a long block and start building that. it would be the best for you. leave the good motor in there.
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If you are gonna run nitrous:
Engine Management is your best friend. Period, End of Story. Crome, Hondata, Neptune, Electromotive, whatever as long as you have some way of tuning it on a dyno.
If you want to run nitrous without a care in the world, a set of sleeves should be in your build, along with a good set of forged pistons and rods. Like forced induction, nitrous will be allowing for a LOT more air in the system, as it it not only an oxidizer itself, but also cools the intake charge alot. So build the engine as if you were building it for turbo. It will be safe, and given a good tune, it will be reliable on or off the juice.
I don't have any specific website links or anything specific to hand you, but if you bulletproof the bottom end, you should have no problems running nitrous on a daily basis.
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Subarus are much more pricey than older honda engines, that is very true. My buddy has modded his 2002 wrx with all the Cobb necessities - Access Port, bellmouth downpipe with a full 3" turboback exhaust, and upipe, and all that stuff has cost him about what my entire b18 build cost me, including my tuning tools.
The H22 will be more expensive, but if you know people, you can get could deals on parts, just do your research. If I were going to build for nitrous/all motor, I'd probably shoot for around 10:1 compression, so you won't be sluggish off th juice like you would be at 9:1 with a turbo setup. You'd have ample wiggle room for tuning, without a big risk of detonation of pump gas. If you are in the market for engine management, a chipped p28 and an obd1 conversion will be your best bet I'm guessing, I am pretty sure you can do that on even a newer gen prelude, but I'm not 100 percent sure. Crome is a good tuning package, and has provisions for datalogging. Talk to Chris Harris at Xenocron.com about getting an appropriate tuning package whatever route you decide to go.
Like I said, a good set of sleeves will be your best friend in an h22, whatever route you decide to go, and 10:1 compression will even allow for a good turbo setup if you decide that the all motor route is not for you. Golden Eagle seems to be a choice for most; I was recommended LA Sleeve, or AEBS by the only machine shop that I will let touch my motor here locally, so just do your research. 210-225 whp off juice is a very reachable goal with proper selection of components; Cams, a proper valvejob, mild porting (even a diy job would most likely suffice), a free flowing, tuned exhaust/header system, and of course dyno tuning will get you some very usable power for daily driving. Xenocron sell a thingy that is able to run two different maps on the same ecu with just a flick of a switch, so that would take care of your tuning for both tunes on and off juice.
Quoted post[/post]]
Wrong. Seen plenty of quick all motor builds with nitrous, quick without, and quicker with.
Quoted post[/post]]
Quoted post[/post]]
Subarus are much more pricey than older honda engines, that is very true. My buddy has modded his 2002 wrx with all the Cobb necessities - Access Port, bellmouth downpipe with a full 3" turboback exhaust, and upipe, and all that stuff has cost him about what my entire b18 build cost me, including my tuning tools.
The H22 will be more expensive, but if you know people, you can get could deals on parts, just do your research. If I were going to build for nitrous/all motor, I'd probably shoot for around 10:1 compression, so you won't be sluggish off th juice like you would be at 9:1 with a turbo setup. You'd have ample wiggle room for tuning, without a big risk of detonation of pump gas. If you are in the market for engine management, a chipped p28 and an obd1 conversion will be your best bet I'm guessing, I am pretty sure you can do that on even a newer gen prelude, but I'm not 100 percent sure. Crome is a good tuning package, and has provisions for datalogging. Talk to Chris Harris at Xenocron.com about getting an appropriate tuning package whatever route you decide to go.
Like I said, a good set of sleeves will be your best friend in an h22, whatever route you decide to go, and 10:1 compression will even allow for a good turbo setup if you decide that the all motor route is not for you. Golden Eagle seems to be a choice for most; I was recommended LA Sleeve, or AEBS by the only machine shop that I will let touch my motor here locally, so just do your research. 210-225 whp off juice is a very reachable goal with proper selection of components; Cams, a proper valvejob, mild porting (even a diy job would most likely suffice), a free flowing, tuned exhaust/header system, and of course dyno tuning will get you some very usable power for daily driving. Xenocron sell a thingy that is able to run two different maps on the same ecu with just a flick of a switch, so that would take care of your tuning for both tunes on and off juice.
he said he wanted to build the motor for nitrous. so assuming he was going to do a forced induction set up, he would want to drop the compression to 9:1 or so. just like you said, lower the compression. I was assuming that he was going to do a full build. when you said do 10:1 so it has power not on nitrous, you confirmed what i posted about not having ample power in comparison to when he does spray.
You wouldn't expect to build a motor for turbo then not put the turbo on right? it would run weak because of the lack of compression.
But adding up the cost of all or your parts and labor, a turbo kit is still a far better route to go. An h22 with 8 pounds of boost will put you at a consistent 220-230 hp range. it will cost an extreme amount less and will have power for daily driving so you don't have to spray all the time.
yes i understand you can build a very good NA h22, but why? it's extremely expensive in comparison to adding a turbo kit and tuning it.
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Wrong. Seen plenty of quick all motor builds with nitrous, quick without, and quicker with.
I was assuming he was building a real build. not an "all purpose" build. Yes it is possible to build a quick all motor car then just add the nitrous.![]()
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i understand you don't want to knock my opinion. because that is exactly what it is, my opinion. I have a 240sx with an sr20det in it. no little honda turbo will compare for me. i was just thinking in terms of efficiency and cost effectiveness. if you like have power to the pedal on demand, i would suggest a supercharger. it would be a lot more reliable and cost effective.
If you are still set on the nitrous, i would be more than willing to give you any advice or suggestions possible. I just feel a simple $2500 turbo or supercharger is a lot more fitting than spending upwards of $5,000 on a nitrous build and tuning.
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