Anyone know what these roller throttle bodies are/for/from?!
Anyone know what these roller throttle bodies are/for/from?!
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Discussion

Renton

Original Poster:

147 posts

252 months

Thursday 13th January 2011
quotequote all
Pals of mine bought a number of Lista work benches with storage cupboards when the remains of TWR was auctioned off.
These rather nice twin-barrel throttle bodies came as part of the lot and we're wondering if anyone knows anything about them?

We're guessing, judging by the size, they're off of some sort of V8 racer..?

The ports are 57mm apart and 57mm wide on the engine side. To give that some perspective, a VAG 20V turbo has ports around 35mm apart. The unit itself is 47cm long.

Any help identifying who made/makes them and what application they're for would be much appreciated.










anonymous-user

78 months

Thursday 13th January 2011
quotequote all
As you say, the engine they are from must have a large bore, so either some sort of specialist race engine or perhaps something like the Aston V8 (70's/80's version ??)


Mattt

16,664 posts

242 months

Thursday 13th January 2011
quotequote all
Do many production cars use roller throttles? Never heard of any before.

anonymous-user

78 months

Thursday 13th January 2011
quotequote all
No, they are deffinately "race" parts only, they even have the TRW logo cast into them!

garagewidow

1,502 posts

194 months

Thursday 13th January 2011
quotequote all
are they conventional roller bodies?(if there is such a thing)
looks like they have two rollers in each bore seeing as the bore is elliptoid like.

stevesingo

5,024 posts

246 months

Thursday 13th January 2011
quotequote all
What is the distance between the injector bosses? This will give a better indication of bore centre spacing.

Steve


yoshimisumi

24 posts

208 months

Friday 14th January 2011
quotequote all
That's a Grainger and Worrall logo if it helps at all - they may have just cast it
http://www.gwcast.co.uk

Renton

Original Poster:

147 posts

252 months

Friday 14th January 2011
quotequote all
Max_Torque said:
No, they are deffinately "race" parts only, they even have the TRW logo cast into them!
Do they? confused

garagewidow said:
are they conventional roller bodies?(if there is such a thing)
looks like they have two rollers in each bore seeing as the bore is elliptoid like.
Correct. They have two rollers which meet in the middle, we've not seen that before.


yoshimisumi said:
That's a Grainger and Worrall logo if it helps at all
http://www.gwcast.co.uk
It certainly does!

We thought it was some sort of 'MY' logo!

Nice one clap

Yuxi

650 posts

213 months

Friday 14th January 2011
quotequote all
Renton said:
Max_Torque said:
No, they are deffinately "race" parts only, they even have the TRW logo cast into them!
Do they? confused

garagewidow said:
are they conventional roller bodies?(if there is such a thing)
looks like they have two rollers in each bore seeing as the bore is elliptoid like.
Correct. They have two rollers which meet in the middle, we've not seen that before.


yoshimisumi said:
That's a Grainger and Worrall logo if it helps at all
http://www.gwcast.co.uk
It certainly does!

We thought it was some sort of 'MY' logo!

Nice one clap
Not sure Grainger's will be much help, what with NDAs etc. and the fact they cast prototype and low volume engine components for just about every engine design/development company in the country.

As stated, the key is the injector spacing, hence bore spacing.

Renton

Original Poster:

147 posts

252 months

Friday 14th January 2011
quotequote all
If the inlet ports are 57mm wide and 57mm apart I'm guessing the injectors will be 114mm apart.
Will confirm on Monday.