Hidden nitrous for a corvette

The first step is to hid the stainless steel braided hose, which is the main feed line. It is a good idea to cover it in wire loom.
Then you need a good mounting location to mount the solenoid. I prefer to paint them black so they are harder to see. Then I find a location that is near impossible to find it on the car unless you know where.
When you have a solenoid location picked out you then need to find a good place for the nozzle. In my case I was spraying a dry shot and needed to place it before my mass air sensor(MAF). So I found this great location.
Now in order to make it work you often need some custom work. So I made me a bracket to hold the nozzle abou 6-8 inches from the MAF. I also had a special hose made through some stock fittings to make it look stock.
Now this setup on my car was good for 300 HP. I personally ran a 200 HP dry shot on it.

Here is the FJO unit mounted in the glove box.
And finally the bottle which sits in the trunk under the covered well. BTW I have a remote opener as well so I never need to visit the bottle except for refills.
I just did the easy thing and dropped it in the rear well and covered it with the cover. I never had any people ever ask me to open the trunk. There are a few places besides the front bumpers you can hide 5 lbs bottles, but I am not giving those locations away.

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The setup looks good though. You did your nozzle almost exactly like I did. My pics are on Robert's website. Only difference was that I used a K&N filter and had dual nozzles.
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