Ah, this grasshopper now understands the true purpose of the fans.
What an unbelievable and incredible project this is! The Shadowman really pushes the envelope and somehow goes further than anyone -- where no man has gone before!
I wish the GT race teams would chime in here. Although I realize they almost certainly don't care about the OEM aspects that Bill has so diligently been concerned about, for sure they must be interested in optimizing the front brake cooling function and perhaps even the project's carefully planned servicing aspects.
I barely understand how most of this effort works and definitely don't how or why anyone would undertake something so difficult and with perhaps such a limited market. But we all are fortunate that guys like Bill (along with Rich, Denis, Kendall, and John Bailey just to name some) are willing to not just help keep our cars in top shape but also to improve the breed.
Thanks for all you do Bill!
Some rain gutter down spouts, dryer ducting, zip ties and duct tape.
I'm getting started on my own.
UPDATE
With the closure panels in the final stage of completion it was time to locate and create the air transition manifold that will allow the duct behind the front inner fender liner to be migrated into the wheel area.
I have the location determined as evidenced in the pictures below and will now fabricate a nice aluminum transition manifold that will be secured to the front portion of the front inner fender liner. By doing it this way it will make the installation and future serving painless all the time creating an OEM appearing system. BTW in order for the system to work as designed we did convert the OEM one piece front inner fender liners to an OEM appearing two piece system that installs as if OEM using all OEM retainers. The two piece system not only makes the process of removing and installing these inner fender liners easy but IMO more importantly all but eliminates the risk of damage as associated with the removal and installation of the one piece system.
Then I also needed to secure the front brake air duct at the spindle/rotor and in doing so also direct the airflow towards the inner portion of the rotor.
I looked at several systems on the market today and also chatted with many folks in the industry and decided that there was no basis or reason to reinvent the proverbial wheel as such I contacted a Forum member that at one time had a pair by backing plates created for his gal for sale that he was no longer using. After a brief conversation I decided to purchase them as mockups/patterns thus taking some of the fundamental design work out of the equation leaving me with only the need to twist and tweak the design to my liking and then fabricate the first run pieces for these gals.
BTW "all" of the materials as presented in these pieces is for mockup purposes only and not the first run hardware that will be use. This includes the inner fender liners that are now wonderful patterns.
Takes care
Shadowman
Great photos and great write up Bill. :biggrin Did you need to replace the Four hub bolts to get some extra length to attach the shroud? Or was there enough length sticking out to mount the shroud and get nuts on them ?
Gentlemen,
I was in Shadowman's garage this morning to get my CF mirrors installed and some clear bra. The functional brake duct project looks even more impressive in person than it does in these photos. Every fabricated part is a work of art. If you see this system up close, you're toast. You will have to buy it. It's that cool. :thumbsup
I need to stop examining other members GTs as each new viewing costs me several thousand dollars! :willy :willy :willy
There's got to be a 12 step program for this. :ack
Chip
Thank you "all" for the kind words; I share this project in hopes to help the next person considering such a project.
All the best
Shadowman