For your consideration. My Rochester EFI project couldn't use the standard fuelie air cleaner assy because of other mods. My solution is sort of a tribute to the '57 airbox cars. The difference is I built my airbox inside the wheel well using the body as the upper part of the air tube. With my set-up there is enought room above the front tire at full travel to build a second inner fender. The cross-sectinal area of the space between the outer body and new inner fender is at least twice the area if my throttle body. I cut a hole in the front of the factory inner fendor behind the grill opening for a bell mouth and a second hole on the back of the factory inner fendor to match a modified Hemi Challenger air cleaner assembly. A short 4.5 inch diameter aluminum tube runs from the air cleaner to the Rochester's throttle body. For your cross ram you would probably want to have two air boxes one in each fender. It only takes up the space to run the internal tubes to the IR plenums. The IR plenums might need to have the inlet point to the side. Works in my C2. I don't have a picture of the assembly but you can see the opening of the air cleaner on the rear fender just behind the remote power steering reservoir. Other pics are air cleaner mod.
Sounds like a neat solution and very interesting. I have been checking out the old Rochester FI setup of the C1/C2 era as well, but I couldn't find enough pictures to get a good look at it.
However, I assume this is a C1 or C2. Those have a lot more room in the inner finder. The C3 doesn't have enough room above the tire to even fit a cone filter. Only possibility would be in front of the tire, but even that space is not big. (How big is that box btw/of which car is that filter box). Even then, the space behind the rear tires/behind the inner fender well, which is probably the only underhood space left; on the left is taken by a vacuum reservoir and vacuum pump, on the right it's occupied by the FI fuel surge tank and low pressure pump (even then I do not have AC, so I have more space than other cars). Placing a hole in the inner fender of a C3 is problematic as well. The left had the brake booster and main cyl sitting in the way, between that and the alternator I managed to squeeze in the air/oil seperator for the PCV. On the right the coolant reservoir sits in the way and more to the front you have the suspension and then the space is too small to even get a 3.5-4" tube through the fender...
I have been thinking something like this :
Where the airbox would sit on top of the engine in the higher bulge of the L88 hood and draw it's cool air from the cowl. However that last one, seemed not to work after I was getting in hot air from the hood.
I would appreciate some more pictures of your setup grampy, there could be details i'm overlooking here. Congrats on that splendid job btw.
Couple of photo's to give you an idea :
Never mind the alu foiling on the right. I found out that my surge tank was heating up quite a bit because of the headers, so this was a test to see if shielding would help. I have some plyable heat shielding coming in, that will replace it.
BTW : I hate those mesh filters, but it's the only thing close to a filter I could find after the foam socks almost caught on fire due to a backfire in the intake (which still happens enough during tuning). I don't trust their filtering ability so I'm not getting enough time to tune it correctly. Well, the season's almost over and I have only driven about 200 kms during and in between the work on the car. At least I have it running somewhat. oh well...