Intercooler Splitter MY01-07 WRX/STi and MY04-07 Forester XT
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The goal when developing the new top
mounted intercooler was to make it the very best aftermarket top
mounted intercooler for WRX/STi... period.

Having studied their competitor products they fixed all of the mistakes they made...some of them major.
The most obvious error that
EVERY one of their competitors makes is not supplying their intercooler
with proper ducting/shrouding to suit the increased size of the new
intercooler. There is no point in installing a larger intercooler and
leaving the factory under bonnet splitter/shroud in place. Here is the
solution. A properly sized splitter/shroud to suit the application.
Below is a pic of Process
Wests top mounted intercooler installed in a 2006 Forester XT. For
demonstration purposes they have removed the factory splitter/shroud
and placed it on the intercooler as if the bonnet were shut. Its simple
to see that 50% of the new upgraded intercooler would be seeing no
ambient air flow... total waste of time and money.

This is how it should be done.
Process West intercooler and splitter/combination showing 100% of the
new larger intercooler with full ambient airflow over the entire core.


Next pic shows a 2005 WRX with
the bonnet scoop removed, factory splitter/scroud still in place. The
white line shows the actual dimension of the upgrade intercooler
underneath. Again...you can see the pointless exercise in upgrading the
intercooler and not the ducting.

The next major problem
that they saw competitors doing (and they all copy each other) is
building an intercooler that is too thick. Their design criteria is
spot on for bragging rights whilst marketing. They say that bigger is
better. This is totally not the case with an intercooler that is
mounted at 90 degrees to the ambient air flow.
For good heat exchange to take place you need good ambient airflow
through the intercooler. In the case of the boxer engine with its
intercooler mounted under a bonnet scoop the ambient airflow speed is
already struggling after doing a 90 degree turn through the scoop. The
last thing it now needs to do is find its way through 114mm (4.5in) of
intercooler core. This will result in poor heat exchange and high inlet
temps.
The Process West intercooler is 90mm thick (3.5in) , the intercooler
breathes, gives lower outlets temps and in turn more power.

Turbo compessor outlet to intercooler (Y-pipe) design
Almost all of the aftermarket y-pipes we see do not distribute the
charge air flow along the intercooler evenly. The y-pipe usually
consists of one nicely flowing section with an afterthough spout as the
second duct.
Looking at the pic below its easy to see that the Process West y-pipe will give perfect charge air distribution.

Combing all 3 features of the
Procees West top mounted intercooler gives the perfectly designed top
mounted intercooler for Subaru. This pic shows the complete combination
of Y-pipe/intercooler/splitter.

Testing
Dyno
Before looking at the results below we must say that dynos and top
mounted intercoolers are not a great mix. No matter where you position
the dyno fan there is still very little air flow into the bonnet scoop.
Having said that both the stock intercooler and the PW upgrade
intercooler were subject to exactly the same test conditions.
A few other things worth mentioning. The
test vehicle was a stock (apart from a BPM GT exhaust system) 05 WRX.
Stock WRXs consistently put down about 90kw ATW on this dyno. The
intercooler outlet temp probe was placed in the silicon hose joiner at
the throttle body. (IAT on the data sheet).
They started off with the PW
intercooler/splitter and did a base line power run. Result was 115.5kw.
Looking at the intercooler outlet temp saw a peak of 51C. At this
point they were a little disappointed. We saved all of the data
collected during the run so that we could overlay it with the results
from the stock intercooler.
Next we installed the stock
intercooler/splitter. Max power was 107.5kw. More disturbing was how
badly the factory WRX intercooler performs.
This graph shows the before and after power (note the test#...these 2 runs were back-to-back).

This graph shows the before
and after intercooler outlet temps. Dark line is the PW unit, lighter
line the stock unit. Note, they made sure that we started the test with
same intercooler outlet temp to give an accurate comparision between
the two....... ie: we gave the stock intercooler every chance to
perform.
You can see both intercoolers started at
about 37C. The PW unit saw a max of 51C and the stock unit 66C. This,
of course is after one run on the dyno

Next test was to see how badly the stock
intercooler is effected by constant back-to-back runs. The below graph
shows 3 runs in quick succession. After the 3rd run they were up to 84C
intercooler outlet temp. We would hate to see the outlet temps after a
few laps at the circuit.

Street testing
Ok, real testing is done on the road. The
only data that they were able to get on the road (with the equipment
that they had) is intercooler outlet temps. They used a Fluke 87
digital multimeter with a K-type thermo couple just before the throttle
body. (same position a the dyno test). They were not able log this data
so you will just have to take our word for it
While doing the dyno testing they
compared the Fluke meter with the dyno AIT probe and they were always
within one degree of each other.
So, out into mountains with the PW
intercooler/splitter combo. Basically, they were unable to get the
intercooler outlet temp above 43C no matter how hard they pushed.
Great................ Pic shows factory splitter
rear and Process West unit front
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