Wireless Nitrous System
We Take Sneaky to Level 5000 with a 130-HP Self-Contained Airbox Nitrous System!
Having a magazine project vehicle is good (if slow-paced) fun, we’re not going to lie. After a while though, you get tired of bolting on other people’s parts, and start to look to make your own waves. In a round about way, this is how our wireless nitrous system came to be. Nitrous is probably one of the single easiest ways to add power to a diesel engine, and can add a good 50-80 hp even on stock trucks. On trucks that have the fuel turned up it can add even more, and on full tilt race vehicles it can add up to 1,000 hp! We weren’t looking for extreme though, we were looking for something different.
Hiding nitrous has been another fun way to mess with your opponents on either the dyno or the dragstrip. In tractor pulling it’s a no-no, but elsewhere it seems to be all in good fun. One of our old rides had a bottle mounted under the bed, and the nitrous lines snaked around under the intake tube. Since diesel engines operate on such a wide air/fuel ratio range, oftentimes you can just inject nitrous straight into the airbox without hurting anything. The nitrous mist is simply sucked in by the compressor, and the power numbers climb up!
A few weeks ago while we were looking for new air filters, we noticed how big a stock Dodge airbox is compared to gas intakes. A buddy of ours races motorcycles that use 1 and 2-pound nitrous bottles and we joked that one would probably fit in there. Then that got us thinking…what if one would actually fit in there? A test fit of the bottle proved that yes, it would, providing hiding place number one for our secret nitrous setup.
The rest of the pieces came together in an even weirder way. We were bringing and old R/C car we’d had since the ‘90s back to life with a new radio and speed controller, when we noticed we were charging the small Lipo batteries to 12.4 volts. The wheels started turning. That’s roughly the same voltage as a low car battery, could there be enough juice to fire a nitrous solenoid? A quick search revealed the speed control we were using was rated to 60 amps; nitrous solenoids were only about 6 to 25 amps. The battery is rated in MAH (milliamp-hours) which doesn’t exactly translate into amps, but what did we have to lose? After cannibalizing our R/C car that we just built, we now had a makeshift wireless nitrous controller. Even if things are well-hidden, you can almost always find a nitrous system by tracing wires. But what if there were no wires?
After we squeezed everything in the stock Dodge airbox for a trial fit, we closed the lid and it shut! We now had a completely self-contained nitrous system in a stock Dodge airbox. All that was left to do was the test. We took a breath, hit the button, and…nothing. Crap. We must have not had enough juice for the solenoid. Next came the more-difficult-than-it-looked step of wiring in a car relay into the system, which would drop the overall amp load and for sure fire the solenoid. We hit the switch, and, nothing. After some irritation, we finally took our solenoid over and just jammed the wires into the car battery. Nothing. Our brand-new solenoid was bad!
After snagging a solenoid from a buddy’s nitrous Camaro (from a different manufacturer) we hooked it up and bam, it triggered instantly. We took the relay out of the system and it still triggered. With our little motorcycle bottle all the way full, it sent a solid stream of spray out of the airbox for about two feet and five seconds until all our nitrous ran out. Obviously this type of tiny bottle wouldn’t be practical for full quarter mile passes, but for the eighth-mile or dyno runs, we could definitely see it. But how would it work in real life?
Testing
Now, keep in mind that this is us installing products, not a shop, so there were the usual growing pains of trying something new. Solenoids, wiring issues, the bottle mount pulling through the airbox, and other fun stuff. The actual test however, was pretty exciting. It just worked! After an initial 375rwhp pull (it’s always good to re-dyno a baseline under same-day conditions) we hit the spray through our R/C controller and could definitely feel it hit. A look at the dyno graph revealed a whopping 506rwhp, or a 131rwhp gain! Peak power was also at 2,400 rpm, which meant a whopping 1,107 lb-ft of torque. If we upped the ante to a 2 1/2-pound bottle (which we’re pretty sure would fit) we’d basically have enough nitrous for one pass, and about a second off our elapsed time. As it is, we’ve lost plenty of races by a fender or two, so even our 1 pound bottle would be some pretty good insurance. It was icing on the cake that we built the entire system for under $400.
Final Thoughts
Originally we were going to title the article “World’s First Wireless Nitrous System!” After some digging though, we found a system described exactly like we were building all the way back in 2001. Like everything else, it appears that it’s been (secretly) done before, but we have to admit it was still a good time, and still an exciting idea. The fact that the setup actually makes a significant difference and can be swapped from truck to truck in about 2 minutes is a riot, as is a stock-appearing 12-valve engine that makes more than 500hp at the wheels. We’re going to go “legit” for our airflow upgrades next with a larger turbocharger, but we gotta give the wireless nitrous setup two thumbs up for taking us on a pretty fun ride.