Here's my situation.
I just got done porting my intake manifold for my twin 44IDF's. Each cylinder has an individual runner obviously. The front runner has the port for the brake booster. Keeping that in mind. The third intake runner has the port for the dizzy. keeping that in mind. Knowing that vacuum is created on the downstroke of the engine. HERE IS THE MAIN QUESTION: Wouldn't it be wiser to drill and put a port into each runner, hook them all up together in a single line and then still just run a single line to the brake booster? My thinking is this. When the engine is idling with multi carbs, the vacuum is "throbbing" because it only works on the downstroke of one cylinder of the engine. If I put a port into each intake runner, being they are all independent of each other that would give me better vacuum for my brakes. More like smooth even vacuum, not throbbing vacuum.
Next thought: Just an analogy or an easy logical way to put this. If my brake booster requires 15lbs minimum of vacuum to operate. and each cylinder creates 5lbs of vacuum. Then I am short 10lbs of vacuum for my brakes to operate easily. where as if i put a port to each cylinder, I'd have 20lbs of vacuum and my brakes would work correctly. Ya, Ya, I made the numbers up for easy calculations. But in theory is this correct? Remembering these aren't V8's and don't have 8 cylinders to create vacuum sufficently. Because now I lost my centrally located vacuum by converting to independent intake runners. Anyone following me here? Maybe i am overthinking this but maybe I am onto something. Give me some thought before i put my intake back on. And distributor vacuum is variable and comes from the carbz and thats a diff subject. I know.
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