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Just saying, it’s never happened and hundreds of guys have iced their lids in the pits and continue to do so. If the tolerances were so tight that their different expansion rates would cause problems when you ice the lid, they’d fail as they get hot too, but they don’t.
Just saying, it’s never happened and hundreds of guys have iced their lids in the pits and continue to do so. If the tolerances were so tight that their different expansion rates would cause problems when you ice the lid, they’d fail as they get hot too, but they don’t.
Heat does come into play from high IAT’s so cooling off the blowers by icing the lid may help the engine make more power from a cooler air charge but it does little to cool the blower lobes and yes they grow and clearance between the rotors diminish and the first thing that starts touching is the rotor tips in the valleys of the opposing rotor, that’s why the tips loose their coating first. Here’s what the clearance looks like in a properly timed blower, about .006” per side, that doesn’t change a whole lot on the sides of the lines when the rotors get hot but their OD’s do grow, on both, and that’s why the tips start touching the valleys first and the coating starts getting chipped off.
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