TNT Power Ring Nitrous kit
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critical. The TNT kit was very good looking, well made kit, couldn't
say the same for some of the competition at that time.

. As for the kits of that era, fitment was better with the MAF kit from NX. Everything could stay in its place unlike the tnt kit in which you were trying to fit the MAF, power ring and bellow all in that little space. 
. As for the kits of that era, fitment was better with the MAF kit from NX. Everything could stay in its place unlike the tnt kit in which you were trying to fit the MAF, power ring and bellow all in that little space.
. As for the kits of that era, fitment was better with the MAF kit from NX. Everything could stay in its place unlike the tnt kit in which you were trying to fit the MAF, power ring and bellow all in that little space.installation.
Nozzle location, depth and alignment can affect the system performance.
As long as you obtain equal nitrous/fuel ratio and volume to each cylinder, you should
be fine.
Last edited by magnum-gto; Mar 29, 2014 at 09:35 AM.
Ok let me re-word this:
The TNT kit with the nozzles pointing towards the T/B with 2 1/2 inches between the blade and nozzle is no different than 2 nozzles in the bellow 2 1/2 inches from the T/B with the fixture nuts in place so the nozzles can't turn.
I've done this before on my car with out the ring. There is no difference in the nozzles and the ring is just a piece of metal.
Trust me I've been around the block too many times on this. My car was just as fast as any car with the TNT ring on it for about half of what the the TNT kit costs.
Plus we both know that any nozzle is a crude form of delivery of nitrous and fuel so you will not get good distribution or even the correct ratio of fuel and nitrous to a cylinder well. A plate does better and a DP is the best.
IMO is that the TNT ring will not be subject to as much movement
under load, as punching holes in the flexible bellows.
When we used the TNT power ring, we had it mounted solid against the throttle body, this assured that movement between the ring and throttle
was virtually nill.
Nothing special, no magic, just a clean,solid way to locate the nozzles.
Kit ratings is only good for sales and bench racing.
Thats like trying to compare a sprinkler to your thumb on the end a garden hose.
IMO is that the TNT ring will not be subject to as much movement
under load, as punching holes in the flexible bellows.
When we used the TNT power ring, we had it mounted solid against the throttle body, this assured that movement between the ring and throttle
was virtually nill.
Nothing special, no magic, just a clean,solid way to locate the nozzles.
Kit ratings is only good for sales and bench racing.

I street grudge race. I have to make it look like I fell off the back of a turnip truck yesterday. I don't worry about 1/4 mile times and breaking records. I use my knowledge instead of spending all my money. I am the guy you see at the track parked in the corner with "N/T" on my window and making half hits like I don't know what I'm doing. It's called "bait". I'm the guy on the street that beats cars that run 8.50's on the track.
I can't say that I have used nitrous since 1981, but I can tell you this, Look at my car and you will say " that looks like its been in the junkyard since 1981" When you race it, you will find out there is nothing "1981" about my car.
......and no....my name is not Michael J. Fox



