What Is A Shaker Hood, And How Do They Work?

Found protruding through functional holes in some classic muscle car bonnets, a shaker hood has some genuine advantages for small gains in power
What Is A Shaker Hood, And How Do They Work?

The hoods or bonnets of cars can take all shapes and sizes, with designs ranging from purely artistic curves to very much functional divots and scoops. In performance-orientated cars, airflow is usually the main factor when deciding upon a bonnet design due to the need for efficient cooling and large volumes of induction air to feed whatever behemoth of an engine is nestled under the hood.

Massive air scoops are therefore extremely common in the performance car sector, used to catch the fast moving air passing over the bonnet and force it in through the intake and air filter to the intake manifold. But there’s a specific form of integral air scoop that has been used on multiple legendary muscle cars that pushes the average bonnet scoop up a few notches of functionality.

It’s called a shaker hood (or shaker scoop) and instead of being part of the car’s bonnet, it is instead an air intake attached directly on top of the air filter (or air cleaner), which in many American muscle cars is positioned on top of the engine block. The name comes from the fact that the air intake shakes as the engine turns over, with the vibrations created from the reciprocal movements transmitting upwards and forcing the intake to tremor.

A shaker hood effectively works as a short ram intake which has a couple of benefits over a standard air intake system. Firstly, the distance the air has to travel before entering the engine’s cylinders is massively reduced due to the lack of long piping that is needed for a general air box system. This means that the intake air experiences much less air resistance as it enters the intake system, thus decreasing unwanted friction and allowing the air to pass smoothly and quickly into the intake with greater efficiency.

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The second benefit is the fact that the larger volume of air capable of entering the engine repeatedly makes for an increase in power. As we all know, you need three basic things for combustion; oxygen, fuel and a spark. By maximising the influx of oxygen to the cylinders, the energy from each combustion cycle will be increased, thus making for a suitable gain in power.

The air will also not have a chance to heat up due to the shortened distance that is has to travel within the engine bay. This cool air is suddenly condensed as it enters the air intake constriction, further increasing the efficiency of the resultant internal combustion due to the large temperature difference between the intake air and the ignition spark.

Most bonnet scoops form a funnel for the air to stream into the intake or an intercooler, rather than being integral to the entire powertrain beneath
Most bonnet scoops form a funnel for the air to stream into the intake or…

Debuting in the Plymouth Barracuda and Dodge Challenger, the shaker hood quickly became synonymous with the legendary American muscle cars powered by the HEMI V8. The big-block engines produced a huge amount of vibration emanating up from the rudimentary OHV systems of the day, forcing the intake to hop and jump around the gaping hole cut in the bonnet to house the component. Chrysler therefore coined it as the “Incredible Quivering Exposed Cold Air Grabber”, but the petrolheads of the time quickly changed the long-winded trademark for the much cooler slang that lives on to this day.

Unfortunately, air intakes like this rely on the speed of the air entering the scoop to define their efficiency. And even then, the sheer amount of air that an internal combustion engine has to suck into itself for combustion means that the intake air never really gets the chance to reach any high levels of pressure before being forced through the intake manifold. So although they look cool and theoretically have a genuine function, power gains are minimal from such intakes and therefore they shouldn’t be seen as the holy grail of horsepower.

Dodge resurrected the shaker hood through its 2014 Challenger
Dodge resurrected the shaker hood through its 2014 Challenger

The HEMI V8 went through a bit of a slump in sales as fuel prices went through the roof in the 1970s and 1980s and as a consequence shaker hoods became less common, but Dodge decided to bring back that little taste of retro ‘Murica with its Challenger SRT10 concept back in 2008. Despite the main furore based around the Viper V10 under the bonnet, many keen-eyed fans spotted what seemed to be a shaker hood intake protruding from the depths of the engine bay.

Dodge then stayed true to its conceptual promise by introducing a shaker kit on the 2014 Challenger to sit atop the V8 powerplant once again. The massive popularity of the retro intake forced Dodge to then feature the shaker hood on its 2015 Challenger as well, with the package being available on all R/T, R/T Plus and 392 Scat Pack trims.

What Is A Shaker Hood, And How Do They Work?

Other famous cars that featured such an intake include the Ford Torino, Ford Mustang Mach 1 special edition and the Pontiac Firebird and GTO, so it’s easy to see why Americans of a certain age get all wide-eyed over the shaker hood legend.

Although it may not have been revolutionary, the shaker hood definitely has its place in the progress in muscle car engineering back in the 1970s and despite power gains being minimal to say the least, the presence of an engine trying to seemingly rip itself free from its own mounts is a sight to behold.

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Comments

Anonymous

“Rudimentary Overhead Camshafts” lol dude they had one camshaft in the block, how did he not know this? Do your research

10/07/2016 - 18:47 |
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