Rather than rebuild or replace the ACD/AYC pump (which is right behind the right rear wheel on a USDM Evo X) every year or so, I've decided to move it inside the trunk, as the Europeans all seem to do. Are there downsides to this that I may not have thought of for a car that is still daily driven? My plan is to use this kit: http://www.autotorque.net/services/ayc-pump-relocation-40/
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DaveK Dave Kern Ultra Moderator Location: Centennial Join Date: 07/11/2008 Age: Midlife Crisis Posts: 1,085 Rally Car: Compact M3 & Evo IX |
I wouldn't want the lines running under the car. In a rally car, fuel lines and brake lines are inside.
On my IX, I copied what ACP did and put it right behind the navvie seat. In the Euro and JDM cars the pump actually sat in the area just inside the quarter panel/bumper so IMO that was a pretty fragile area as well. Looks to me like the kit you pictured actually moved it further inboard, so I say good thinking! Dave |
Thanks. For now, all of the OE hard-lines are still on the bottom of the car, but Ryan Thompson made me a very nice plate that covers them all. At some point, all lines will move inside, just not yet. I just wanted to make sure that it was OK to move the pump inside the trunk. I was assuming that it was where it was for the extra cubic foot of trunk space on the window sticker on the lot, but wanted to be sure.
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Nubby Tony Wells Mega Moderator Location: Omaha, NE Join Date: 07/08/2008 Age: Possibly Wise Posts: 191 Rally Car: SP Evo IX #112 |
The reason the ACD/AYC pump is where it is on US cars, e.g. in the front, is because of US emissions regulations. The space where the ACD/AYC pump normally would live in a Japanese or European Evo is taken up with an evap canister in the US model.
And that's also why US Evos with ACD don't have an intercooler sprayer, because moving the ACD pump to the front takes up the space where the intercooler sprayer goes. |
urr Andrew Sutherland Godlike Moderator Location: Studio City CA / Camas WA Join Date: 02/22/2008 Age: Midlife Crisis Posts: 275 Rally Car: Subaru, EVO, Honda, Husky |
I seem to recall people putting them in front of the co-drivers feet
Rally America rules for Super Production: In Super Production, the Active Center Differential pump and accumulator on a 2005 Mitsubishi Evolution VIII or a 2006-2008 Mitsubishi Evolution IX may be relocated. Maybe Alan can tell us why the X isn't included.....Alan?? |
Hm. I think that you're thinking that I have an 8 or 9, but I have an X. Both the EVAP canister and the ACD/AYC pump are in the rear on an X, regardless of whether the car is USDM or otherwise, from what I understand. It's the 8s and 9s that varied by market. And no X (that I know of) has a sprayer. |
Maybe because the two active differentials in all Xs make it moot? (guess) |
NoCoast Grant Hughes Godlike Moderator Location: Whitefish, MT Join Date: 01/11/2006 Age: Midlife Crisis Posts: 6,818 Rally Car: BMW |
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Nubby Tony Wells Mega Moderator Location: Omaha, NE Join Date: 07/08/2008 Age: Possibly Wise Posts: 191 Rally Car: SP Evo IX #112 |
I should've read your post more carefully, I just assumed they put them up front on the X as well. I don't know if this would suit your needs, but RallyTech makes a guard for the ACD/AYC pump that should keep most of the weather and gravel spray off of it, there's a couple of of them at the bottom of this page: http://rallytech.co.uk/index.php/products/mitsubishi-evo-parts/71 Maybe easier than relocation, probably more expensive, not sure. I know Davenport Racing can get RallyTech stuff if you decide you want to get a quote. |
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urr Andrew Sutherland Godlike Moderator Location: Studio City CA / Camas WA Join Date: 02/22/2008 Age: Midlife Crisis Posts: 275 Rally Car: Subaru, EVO, Honda, Husky |
That's certainly a strong theory! Another is that there aren't any, or very few, people running an X in SP so they haven't lobbied to have the rule changed. The way I understand it, there are two main reasons to move the pumps into the car 1) get it out of harm’s way 2) keep it clean. I think it was PVB that said the pumps are very sensitive to dirt and dust, which leads to premature failure. I don’t see the point for a street car… |
john vanlandingham John Vanlandingham Elite Moderator Location: Ford Asylum, Sleezattle, WA Join Date: 12/20/2005 Age: Fossilized Posts: 14,152 Rally Car: Saab 96 V4 |
The dead fish gape mouth look doesn't get your loins a-tingling, huh? John Vanlandingham Sleezattle, WA, USA Vive le Prole-le-ralliat www.rallyrace.net/jvab CALL +1 206 431-9696 Remember! Pacific Standard Time is 3 hours behind Eastern Standard Time. |
Nubby Tony Wells Mega Moderator Location: Omaha, NE Join Date: 07/08/2008 Age: Possibly Wise Posts: 191 Rally Car: SP Evo IX #112 |
They are sensitive to dust and dirt, but you have to get it into the hydraulic fluid, and there isn't an easy ingress except for the tiniest of vent holes in the fluid reservoir. I don't know realistically how much dust can get through that little vent. Could probably just take a circle of coffee filter and rubber band or hose clamp it over the lid and never have to worry about it. Which just gave me an idea.... |
What kills most pumps - whether it be on an 8, 9, or X - is corrosion from the surface working its way inside, separating the needs-to-be-perfectly-flat plate from one or both sides of the body around it. I have never heard of a pump being killed by anything in the fluid (but you can't prove a negative and I'm not sure if you'll trust my ability to search, anyway).
My point is that, regardless of how the car is being used, moving the pump from its OE location to inside the trunk will most likely pay for itself, several times over. My question was whether there's some non-obvious reason for not moving the pump. You seemed like the folks most likely to have moved a pump - or, at least, considered it - so I (stupidly) asked you. If you'd like to see what a pump from the OE location looks like after five years, here you go: Edited 2 time(s). Last edit at 07/30/2013 11:03PM by Iowa999. |
blackboxrally Alvin Fong Mod Moderator Location: Danbury, CT Join Date: 07/10/2012 Posts: 11 Rally Car: Frankensteined Evo IX |
first, bwahahhahaha.
now to answer your question: One potential downside when relocating the pump could be latency when moving the pump further away from the ACD unit itself (i've never tested this theory). This was an argument i heard when comparing its placement on the codriver floor vs behind the seats. Since the evo X one was engineered to be placed in the rear, i don't think it would be a significant issue. Some practical reasons not to relo to trunk: 1) Not sure what you carry in your trunk, but between the hammer, fluids, and hacksaw in mine, things have a tendency to fly around quite a bit during spirited driving sessions tearing a warpath in its way. So maybe think about where the lines/bracket will be placed in relation to things that can hit it. 2) when ::insert tool here:: inevitably strikes your ACD, now in the trunk, while you're drifting sideways down Mt. Akina, and it starts leaking all over the place, the first thing it will leak all over are your most prized posessions, such as, xbox, computer monitors, and/or hack saws, instead of the earth that the biodegradable acd fluid is meant to be absorbed by. If you have the time to do it, it's a good mod. anyone that lives in new england can show you how quickly corrosion eats up underbody parts. rebuilding/saucing ACD pumps is expensive. i'm assuming no one has campaigned an evoX in SP because it's still much cheaper to sauce evo 8/9 shells. An SST would be pretty awesome to have along with AYC if it could be tuned right! Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 08/13/2013 12:37PM by blackboxrally. |