gotta comment on this one
Ya, I get it, there is a such thing as having too much air
yes, if you don't have enough fuel - why complain for lack of power then, you want more air so you can burn more fuel = more HP
because if you suck more air than you can burn
you burn fuel not air, same as above - you want more air to burn more fuel to make more power. If your AFR is too high (lean mixture) then you need to fix the fuel delivery
... you can generate turbulence in the intake system which makes it run badly in the high end
i agree with you on the turbulence, but is not b/c of too much air but due to poor intake tubing, keep it smooth and no tight turns or sharp angles and will flow just fine (given that is properly sized as far as diameter)
You really want smooth pressurized airflow.
how do you get pressurized airflow in a normally aspirated engine? smooth yeah, pressurized not so much. you're right about smooth airflow thru the intake tubing, the smoother the flow the less pressure loss so more air into the cylinders, so this kind of contradicts the previous statements (and the opposite goes for turbulence, you get pressure drop and lose VE).
Finally someone that has experienced the affect of to much air. Your air intake, air volume and pressure sould be somewhat macthed to your spark and fuel. At least close to working operation, such as some horse power gains along with torque. Also maybe better fuel consumption. I know there is a fine line between more power and burning more fuel with it. Hard to find a good balance.
where to start
effects of too much air: you should begin with checking your fuel system (injectors, pump, pressure, filter, MAP Sensor ,etc) if you think your engine is starved of fuel, remember you added a 4.0L t/b to gain airflow, then you say you have too much air - here's a fix, put back your original 2.5L t/b. Might want to actually start with an AFR gauge on and see what your results are, if you're too lean you need more fuel (and you'll get more power if you fix it, not the other way around as in reduce the air to lower the AFR and get richer mixture).
air volume and pressure sould be somewhat macthed to your spark and fuel
there's no pressure, you don't have a turbo. your PCM will control the spark (not sure how you match your spark by reducing air)
Also maybe better fuel consumption.
you are correct here, if you make less power you will improve your mpg (you drive slower)
such as some horse power gains along with torque...I know there is a fine line between more power and burning more fuel with it. Hard to find a good balance.
actually is not that hard, your O2 sensor takes care of that in closed loop (unless is damaged) - in open loop you'll need an AFR gauge, if you're too lean you need to fix your fuel problem (i probably said that too many times).
the HP produced by your engine is based on the amount of air your engine can circulate in a cycle - the more air the more fuel you can burn and that means more power - the BSFC for your engine and the amount of fuel you burn = HP output. Higher displacement engines will have a higher airflow and that's how they make more HP. If there's no fuel then yes, there is a problem but the fix is not by choking the intake.