05SportTrac
New Member
- Joined
- July 5, 2005
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- City, State
- Ringgold, Ga
- Year, Model & Trim Level
- 2005 Sport Trac

Thanks Donald
Don05SportTrac said:I have a 2005 Ford Explorer Sport Trac with 15,000 miles on it. I was wondering how much nitrous will it hold without messing up the transmission or motor. Also which rear end comes in the Sport Tracs? I know it has the 3.73 gear but not sure on the rear end. Its a 4x2 if that makes any difference not sure.
Thanks Donald
05SportTrac said:This isn't my first go around with nitrous. I've had it on my two other vehicles and am pretty much prepared for the instal. I have availability to both a wet and a dry kit, but would like to use the dry for safety reason(fuel solenoids defecctive = nitrous and no extra fuel). I was just wandering how much the tranmission and bottem end can handle. I've already got a set of NGK 6 and a set of NGK 7s for this motor. Both of my other engines also has hypereutectic pistons and did fine(both had well over 130,000 miles on the motor)
Doug904 said:Hey guy,
You can run a dry kit but you'll wanna shoot in it before the MAF and also have it Dyno tuned for it. This way the MAF will account for the additional fuel requirements. Yes, I know it sounds weird but I've done it for over a year with my Whipple truck and do it normally on a 03-04 Cobra's. This is also the way it is done on some LS-1's.
The Sport Trac's have a returnless fuel system that is much different then that of a Mustang as it doesn't increase fuel pressure electronically. Nor is the fuel pressure regulator on the rail, yes it looks like one and would be one if it had a return line but it is nothing more then a pulse dampner. The regulator is in the fuel tank and cannot be modified.
Now for the 4.0 engine itself with a safe tune you're looking at a 50-75hp shot without any engine troubles. As I'm sure you know with your nitrous experience it's all in the a/f ratio and the plugs and it sounds like you're on the right track with the plugs although you have the wrong ones. You need NGK TR7-1's or TR6-1's as the 4.0 SOHC from 01' and up uses a 1/4 inch longer spark plug. Yes, I know the NGK site nor Autozone shows this but remove one and you'll see what I mean.
As for the tranny and rear end, the rear end you'll be fine with. The 8.8 can handle quite a bit. As for the tranny, if it's an auto stick with the 50 shot, if it's a stick you may get away with the 75 for a while but eventually your clutch will start slipping.
I'm over in Alabama just north or Birmingham and I plan on coming to Warner Robbins soon as I do Dyno tuning there on occasions, I also tune in B'ham. Just let me know if I can help.
The biggest part is the tune, who ever you use make sure it's safe and done on a dyno or with a wideband 02.
Thanks, Doug.
BeauJ said:A wet system is more safe, but also more expensive. It mixes with your injectors to make a safe mixture instead of just coming in with air through the intake. A Dry 50-75 shot would be safe IMHO with Iridium plugs, chip, and different plug wires. The only thing bad about the engine is the Hyperuetic pistons: very weak. As long as you aren't using the shot constantly, you should be fine.
rocket 5979 said:Ditto.....and also....One heat range colder plugs...
Doug - Spraying pre-MAF, though quite popular, is still a somewhat ghetto way to account for the shot of nitrous coming into the intake. Best way to do it is just get a flipchip and custom tune for it. Do that along with a bottle heater to keep the temp/pressure consistant and things will be great. Spraying too close pre-MAF can possibly damage the element in there, that is why I dont reccomend this.
Doug904 said:Yes, You are right with this but it is far from Ghetto. I'm not saying go out and plumb it up and spray the day away but have it tuned for this. This is actually one of the best ways to monitor the new airmass that is going into the engine. What does nitrous do? Condenses air by cooling it off right? Well this air then flows through the MAF and then it can measure it and tell the PCM the correct load and other values to account for with it.
Make sure you have a 6-8 inch section before the MAF that you locate the nozzle in. Also spraying Nitrous won't damage the MAF, if you spray it directly on the MAF elements then you could possibly cause a freezing condition but it is only a gas. You would still have to position the nozzle very close to the MAF elements and spray it for a long time to do this. Mine actually sprays downward on top of the panel type airfilter and then mixes with the air going into the MAF.
The MAIN thing to remember here is your are going to NEED a dynotune to ensure you are doing this safely. Ghetto is just going out and hooking it up and wishing for the best.![]()
Later Doug.