I have seen logged Motec data showing intake temps drop by 8-10deg on my mate's 2.0L turbo Ford Escort Improved Production track car when the intercooler spray has been used.
A spray setup alone won't result in massive power gains, but anything that takes heat out of the engine will help it run more efficiently and keep it alive a little longer, especially when you're driving it hard for up to 10minutes at a time in a track outing (I'm not talking "road warrior" crap either, where you boost around city streets "battling" other Sunday drivers, blasting through the hills with your mates or 11-12 second qtr mile runs where nothing really has the chance to heat up).
The trick is to get the spray working on the intercooler before it gets too hot, otherwise you won't be able to maintain your ideal core temperature and get enough heat out of the charged air to extract maximum efficiency, so you need to set the spray up on an automatic trigger that kicks in when a certain intake temp and road speed is reached. To conserve water you should run the power through a flasher setup so the pump pulses the spray instead of just staying on continuously and draining your water supply in the first 1.5 laps of your track session.
It makes me laugh seeing the intercooler spray buttons in factory setups
- what do they think people will do? push the button expecting it to be like a NOS injection that will unlock hidden "killerwasps" from their engine? "Hmmm.... I'm losing this drag battle, better look for and push that intercooler spray button to get the competitive edge back...... UH-OH! DANGER TO MANIFOLD!!!" :thumbsup:
It would be cheaper for OEMs to ditch the intercooler spray button and just program the ECU to read the intake temp and road speed inputs (or engine rpm) and have the intercooler spray trigger automatically like I mentioned.