ar15kittykat
Enthusiast
- Joined
- Dec 29, 2007
- Posts
- 23
- Reaction score
- 0
Just kidding, it's not an ACR splitter but a Jeff Lemmke Street Serpent splitter. After studying some close up pics of the ACR, Prefix, ACR prototype, Archer Racing splitters, I wanted that type of design, clean & functional w/o paying $1700-3000 for a splitter.
After discussing w/ Jeff, he stated his splitter was designed to mount to the bottom of his serpent bumper, very similar design as ACR, Prefix, etc... Mounts to bottom of bumper where it meets the undertray, but Jeff stated he has never installed his splitter on an OEM bumper; Jeff sent me some pics of his splitter, after analyzing it, I knew this can work. The ACR and Prefix splitters uses 2 support cables going thru th bumper instead of in front of the bumper, I feel that if Jeff can mount his on street serpent w/o cables, then it's strong enough if I mounted correctly to my stock bumper.
We all know splitters mounts at the bottom of the bumper & splits the high pressure and low pressure air, restricting less volume of air from entering the bottom of air, creating less & faster air, causing low pressure, hence the sunction effect. The more the splitter protrude in front of the bumper, the more downforce iot creates, but I only mounted 1.5" in front of the bumper just for a tad more downforce, didn't want to offset the balance on the rear.
The splitter came w/ no mounting holes drilled yet, so I took off the SRT bumper, aligned it, drilled & screwed all 10 holes that is to be mounted to the undertray, then marked optimum mounting points for splitter to be attached to bumper, then drilled another 26 holes for more screws. I used 1" & 3/4" washers on both sides for a sturdy solid mount. After all screws were bolted down, sprayed them w/ some paint to seal/ lock the threads to avoid anything working themselves loose. Also, made sure the part where the splitter meets the bumper & under tray must be almost air sealed so air would not get thru the gap, but must pass above & below the splitter.
Cut the 2 edges of the plitter to conform w/ the bottom of the bumper, used 1/3 can of primer, and 2 can of gloss black from Walmart.
Now the true test, high speed test drive from 70-140mph on the tollway when barely any cars, the car felt like it's more glued to the ground. After a couple of days of spirited driving, everything is still mounted solid, no movement at all, functional, and looks pretty clean With splitter, it's about 2_3/4" lower at the front tip of the bumper, and 1/3" lower than undertray where it's mounted.
This can be a do-it yourself job, heck, a software guy like me did it, so anyone interested in an alternative splitter to the ACR, Prefix, or other high end CF splitter can give Jeff a call.
- $350 fiberglass street serpent splitter + $60 shipping.
- $4 for Primer & 2 can of spray paint.
- 1 day DIY - priceless
Jeff was very professional, courteous, & helpful in answering any questions I had, thank you JeffLemmke !
Work in progress:
Jeff's Street Serpent splitter:
High end CF splitters for comparison:
Prefix splitter
ACR & ACR prototype splitters
After discussing w/ Jeff, he stated his splitter was designed to mount to the bottom of his serpent bumper, very similar design as ACR, Prefix, etc... Mounts to bottom of bumper where it meets the undertray, but Jeff stated he has never installed his splitter on an OEM bumper; Jeff sent me some pics of his splitter, after analyzing it, I knew this can work. The ACR and Prefix splitters uses 2 support cables going thru th bumper instead of in front of the bumper, I feel that if Jeff can mount his on street serpent w/o cables, then it's strong enough if I mounted correctly to my stock bumper.
We all know splitters mounts at the bottom of the bumper & splits the high pressure and low pressure air, restricting less volume of air from entering the bottom of air, creating less & faster air, causing low pressure, hence the sunction effect. The more the splitter protrude in front of the bumper, the more downforce iot creates, but I only mounted 1.5" in front of the bumper just for a tad more downforce, didn't want to offset the balance on the rear.
The splitter came w/ no mounting holes drilled yet, so I took off the SRT bumper, aligned it, drilled & screwed all 10 holes that is to be mounted to the undertray, then marked optimum mounting points for splitter to be attached to bumper, then drilled another 26 holes for more screws. I used 1" & 3/4" washers on both sides for a sturdy solid mount. After all screws were bolted down, sprayed them w/ some paint to seal/ lock the threads to avoid anything working themselves loose. Also, made sure the part where the splitter meets the bumper & under tray must be almost air sealed so air would not get thru the gap, but must pass above & below the splitter.
Cut the 2 edges of the plitter to conform w/ the bottom of the bumper, used 1/3 can of primer, and 2 can of gloss black from Walmart.
Now the true test, high speed test drive from 70-140mph on the tollway when barely any cars, the car felt like it's more glued to the ground. After a couple of days of spirited driving, everything is still mounted solid, no movement at all, functional, and looks pretty clean With splitter, it's about 2_3/4" lower at the front tip of the bumper, and 1/3" lower than undertray where it's mounted.
This can be a do-it yourself job, heck, a software guy like me did it, so anyone interested in an alternative splitter to the ACR, Prefix, or other high end CF splitter can give Jeff a call.
- $350 fiberglass street serpent splitter + $60 shipping.
- $4 for Primer & 2 can of spray paint.
- 1 day DIY - priceless
Jeff was very professional, courteous, & helpful in answering any questions I had, thank you JeffLemmke !
You must be registered for see images attach
You must be registered for see images attach
You must be registered for see images attach
You must be registered for see images attach
Work in progress:
You must be registered for see images
You must be registered for see images
You must be registered for see images
Jeff's Street Serpent splitter:
You must be registered for see images
You must be registered for see images
You must be registered for see images
High end CF splitters for comparison:
Prefix splitter
You must be registered for see images
You must be registered for see images
ACR & ACR prototype splitters
You must be registered for see images
You must be registered for see images
Last edited: