Monday, Apr 29, 2019 at 13:15
The standard Toyota
snorkel is quite adequate to do what roof-level snorkels are designed to do - suck in air that contains less dust, and avoid ingesting water in deep water immersion situations.
There are dozens and dozens of webpages "pushing" the supposed advantages of aftermarket snorkels with forward-facing intakes and supposedly creating cleaner air and producing colder air for the engine.
Naturally, all these websites are written by designers of the aftermarket snorkels and by website owners seeking income from sponsors. Of course, they are going to "boom up" the products they discuss in a cosy "mate-to-mate" fashion.
The advantages of aftermarket snorkels over a Toyota factory
snorkel are minimal.
They can't eliminate much incoming dust - unless they comprise or contain a centrifugal-action precleaner style of arrangement (a la Donaldson precleaners).
They can't produce colder air for the engine, the incoming air is at ambient temperature - so if it's a stinking hot day, your engine will still suck in hot air.
You will sometimes notice a difference in engine performance with any
snorkel, as the intake air temperature lowers substantially on cold nights. You notice this most in cold valleys on still nights.
There will sometimes be a sizeable temperature difference between the outside ambient air temperature at roof level, compared to the air inside the engine bay.
However, not all standard aircleaners suck air from inside the engine bay.
Many engines suck air from inside the wheel
well, or from behind the grille - where the air is at ambient outside temperature.
Bottom line, nearly all aftermarket snorkels are fitted for appearance sake, to make the 4WD look like a "real 4WD".
The market for aftermarket roof-level snorkels started because many earlier aircleaner intake arrangements were less than satisfactory.
Most vehicle manufacturers have woken up to the owners requirements for better aircleaner arrangements.
I can remember a business associate wrecking his new 380SL Mercedes engine when he took us for an inspection of an item of equipment we wanted to sell.
The road to the machine we were going to inspect was a gravel road, it was mid-Winter, and we'd had about 25-30mm of rain overnight.
We came to a small floodway with a small creek flowing over the road. The associate (who was a pretty arrogant a***hole), asked if it was safe to cross.
I replied, "I drive my Holden utes through this kind of stuff all the time. Can't see why the Merc can't do it".
Unbeknowns to me (and the Merc owner), the 380SL had an amazingly-crafted air intake, that snaked across the engine bay, went through the front radiator panel, and ended up sucking in air, just below the centre of the front bumper!!
Of course, those Mercedes engineers had designed that intake to suck in cool fresh air, from Autobahns, at 200kmh!!
It did a wonderful job of scooping up about 40 litres of bitingly cold, muddy creek water, and distributing it thoroughly throughout that fine V8 Mercedes engine!
It immediately broke rings and probably did a whole heap of other engine damage, too! (we never did find out the total damage cost).
Suffice to say, the Merc owner was mightily pissed-off at seriously damaging his near-new Merc engine - while we secretly had a good laugh about it! Couldn't have happened to a nicer bloke (he never even purchased our item of equipment, either! LOL).
Cheers, Ron.
AnswerID:
625230
Follow Up By: ExplorOz Team - Michelle - Monday, Apr 29, 2019 at 13:49
Monday, Apr 29, 2019 at 13:49
wow, what a story!!
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898854
Follow Up By: OBJ - Monday, Apr 29, 2019 at 14:37
Monday, Apr 29, 2019 at 14:37
Nice one, Ron.
Thanks for that. I enjoyed the laugh.
Cheers
OBJ
FollowupID:
898860
Follow Up By: Charliektm400exc - Tuesday, Apr 30, 2019 at 20:45
Tuesday, Apr 30, 2019 at 20:45
Can’t comment on if a
snorkel makes any difference to water crossings,but I can tell you there is probably a significant temperature difference between where a normal intake is, and the height of a
snorkel. I ride a motorcycle, and am currently travelling up through outback Queensland.
I can tell a significant temperature difference between what I feel sitting on the
seat and when I stand up. Much cooler when I stand up. It might all be ambient, but my interpretation is, that the bitumen adds a lot more to the temperature then just ambient.
Charlie
FollowupID:
898914
Follow Up By: Batt's - Sunday, May 12, 2019 at 03:36
Sunday, May 12, 2019 at 03:36
Ron when I fitted a
snorkel to my GQ TD42 which already had an after market turbo intercooler, larger exhaust done 4yrs prior the econ improved by half a litre and I noticed the engine revved up a bit easier through the gears. It may have been a different story without the other mods. I fitted it to hopefully gain something which I did. But yes some fit them for looks or believe they can now drive through deeper water trouble free but forget about their computer and other electrical or mechanical items which are no better off.
Some vehicles need one like the TD5 Disco I once had I've had 9 4wd's, only had snorkels on 2 of them and the Disco was the only one that ever sucked sand into the air box through the factory intake so it needed one for sure.
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899173