Details are surfacing on the unique 10-stack intake manifold EngineLabs first featured last December when the 427 Windsor was on the R&R Performance dyno. Other than a couple of overall candidsΒ clearly showing a single ram tube and throttle body for each cylinder, plus a pair of smaller stacks in the middle, nothing else was known about this striking one-off fabrication.
βI like to be original, and itβs tough to come up with something totally original anymore,β says Tom Dunrud, the designer and machinist who built the engine for his Factory Five β33 hot rod.
Dunrod started with a Ford Racing Z427 crate motor that doesnβt come with induction or ignition packages. He wanted the nostalgic personality of 8-stack hardwareΒ that evolved from the original V8 Hilborn injectors. While an intake manifold with individual runners has performance advantages over a common-plenum design in certain race applications, they are much harder to tune and often suffer from low-speed drivability issues in street engines. Theyβre also more expensive with individual throttle blades, intricate linkage and complicated fuel systems.
Dunrudβs strategy focused onΒ a 3-piece intake with individual runners, ram tubes and throttle plates for each cylinder, but he also integrated a central plenum between the cylinders for idle operation and to provide a signal for the EFI’s MAP sensor. Feeding that shallow plenum would be two smaller ram tubesΒ and throttle plates.
Dunrud used his machine-shop experience to design the manifold on SolidWorks, then tested the dimensions using full-size templates on the engine.
βItβs similar to primaries and secondaries on a carb, except that youβre controlling just air and not fuel,β explains Dunrud. βBasically, you change strategies when going from primaries to secondaries. Youβre going from a common plenum to individual runners.β
Owner of Accura Tool & Engineering in Staples, Minnesota, Dunrud used SolidWorks to draw out and test his ideas. He also made full-size printouts of the templates and mocked them up on the long-block assure the baseplate would fit properly.
Milling a small plenum
The bottom section supports the runner transition from the cylinder-head face to the vertical position for the throttle blades and ram tubes, and also cradles the lower half of the throttle-blade shafts. Nestled between the rows of intake ports is a wide, shallow plenum area with 7/16-inch feeder holes from the plenum to each port.
βItβs almost like a 360-degree intake on a very small scale,β says Dunrud.
The intake is made up of three separate layers. Note the shallow common plenum on the first section (top row) while the second plate (bottom left) encloses the plenum and throttle shafts. The top layer supports the ram tubes (bottom right).
The individual runners sport 2-inch throttle openings, a size Dunrud determined afterΒ examining other systems on the market. Diameter for the center stacks comes in at 1.5-inches.
βI didnβt think the center ones mattered all that much,β says Dunrud. βI didnβt know if the restriction was going to be the butterfly or in the hole from the plenum to the port. But I knew I didnβt want just one stack because the shape of the plenum is low and flat. I figured Iβd get better air distribution with two, and I didnβt see any reason to go with more.β
Dunrud also designed the progressive throttle linkage and housing that supports the TPS.
The 3/8-inch diameter throttle shafts are cut from 4440 stainless steel and ride on self-lubricating bushings. The throttle blades are machined from 15-5 stainless steel.
βThe hardest part was getting the throttle blades to fit right,β says Dunrud, noting it took three tries to achieve the desired results. βWith 10 blades you canβt have any air going by or youβre never be able to control the idle. I ended up with a much thicker blade than traditional for more surface contact.β
Most of the aluminum was anodized black. The fuel and spark get their instructions from a Holley Dominator ECU.
Designing the progressive throttle linkage was much easier as SolidWorks allowed Dunrud to simulate every movement.
βThe main concern was how much the primaries would open before the secondaries kick in,β says Dunrud, who again looked at conventional applications while researching the issue. βThis was a guess and I settled on 30 degrees. I figure thatβs similar to a 4-barrel carb.β
Tuning 10 stacks
All three sections are machined from 6061 billet aluminum. A little extra material was left around the ports so they could be matched to the cylinder head. Dunrud also machined the fuel rails for the fuel injectors, fabricated the ram tubes and had most of the components hard anodized in black. The air-filter elements are from C. Cook Enterprises. He added an MSD ignition and tied the fuel system to a Holley Dominator ECU.
βIt ran way too rich at first,β says Dunrud. βFor the first 30 degrees of throttle rotation, thereβs actually very little throttle opening, so I had to really cut back on the fuel. After 30 degrees, then we open it up pretty quick. The Holley EFI is really nice with its flexibility.β
The engine dynoβd at 530 horsepower with limited time for fine tuning. Ford rated the Z427 at 535 horsepower using a carb and Edelbrock Super Victor intake.
βI felt pretty good coming within five horsepower of an established racing intake. I believe thereβs some tuning left in it,β says Dunrud, noting that while running on only the primary openings the engine pulled 60 horsepower. βThatβs more than enough to cruise this car at 70 or 80 mph.β
Finally, Dunrud has a goal of running his β33 in the 10-second bracket at the dragstrip.
βFirst time out was an 11.13,β he says. βSo it should run in the 10s easily.β

The engine powers a heavily modified Factory Five ’33 and already runs in the low 11s at the strip with plans to go even quicker.