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Intake Manifolds
Choosing an intake manifold for a V8 engine swap comes down to three decisions: design type, engine family fitment, and how you're delivering fuel. Get all three right and the manifold works with the engine's power band rather than against...
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Holley EFI 300-920
Holley EFI HI-RAM BASE, FORD COYOTE
Fits 2011-2023 Ford 5.0 Coyotes
Part TypeEngine Intake Manifold£661.99 inc VAT£551.66 ex VAT -
Holley EFI 300-912
Holley EFI ULTRA LO-RAM FORD COYOTE - 2015-2020 GT350 or 2019-2022
2015-2020 GT350 or 2019-2022 GT500
Part TypeEngine Intake Manifold£971.99 inc VAT£809.99 ex VAT -
Holley EFI 300-911
Holley EFI ULTRA LO-RAM FORD COYOTE - 2007-2014 GT500 Throttle
2007-2014 GT500 Throttle
Part TypeEngine Intake Manifold£971.99 inc VAT£809.99 ex VAT -
Holley EFI 300-910
Holley EFI HI-RAM FORD COYOTE - 2007-2014 GT500 Throttle
2007-2014 GT500 Throttle
Part TypeEngine Intake Manifold£971.99 inc VAT£809.99 ex VAT -
Holley EFI 300-715
Holley Lo-Ram Manifold Base - GM Gen V LT - Top-Feed - OE Direct
Top-Feed - OE Direct Injection Only - Satin...
Part TypeEngine Intake Manifold£943.99 inc VAT£786.66 ex VAT -
Holley EFI 300-710
Holley Lo-Ram Manifold Base - GM Gen V LT - Top-Feed - OE Direct
Top-Feed - OE Direct Injection Only - Satin...
Part TypeEngine Intake Manifold£632.99 inc VAT£527.49 ex VAT -
Holley EFI 300-680
Holley Ultra Lo-Ram Manifold Kit Single Injector- Satin - GM LS3/L92
Ultra Lo-Ram Base Intake Manifold Plenum Top Mounting...
Part TypeEngine Intake Manifold£1,100.99 inc VAT£917.49 ex VAT -
Holley EFI 300-679
Holley Lo-Ram Manifold Kit Single Injector- Satin - GM LS3/L92
Lo-Ram Base Intake Manifold Plenum Top Mounting Flange...
Part TypeEngine Intake Manifold£1,093.99 inc VAT£911.66 ex VAT -
Holley EFI 300-624
Holley EFI Dual Fuel Injector Lo-Ram EFI Intake Manifold Kit GM…
Cast Satin Finish
Part TypeEngine Intake Manifold£1,324.00 inc VAT£1,103.33 ex VAT -
Holley EFI 300-623
Holley EFI 300-623 LS1 Lo-Ram EFI Front-Feed Manifold Kit
Burst Panel Flange
Part TypeEngine Intake Manifold£931.00 inc VAT£775.83 ex VAT -
Holley EFI 300-620
Holley Modular Lo-Ram EFI Manifold LS1/2/6 - Lo-Ram Manifold Kit -
Lo-Ram Base Intake Manifold Plenum Top Mounting Flange...
Part TypeEngine Intake Manifold£1,208.99 inc VAT£1,007.49 ex VAT -
Holley EFI 300-600
Holley EFI Base Manifold And Rail Kit For Lo-Ram - LS1/LS2/LS6
Satin Finish with Single Injector manifold and fuel...
Part TypeEngine Intake Manifold£748.99 inc VAT£624.16 ex VAT -
Holley EFI 300-308
Holley EFI 8.2" SBF Ford Hi-Ram EFI Manifold With Side Mount Top
*** Please see the diagrams in the product...
Part TypeEngine Intake Manifold£1,369.99 inc VAT£1,141.66 ex VAT -
Holley EFI 300-272
Holley EFI 8.2" SBF Ford Hi-Ram EFI Manifold
*** This Holley Hi-Ram intake manifold series is...
Part TypeEngine Intake Manifold£1,330.00 inc VAT£1,108.33 ex VAT -
Holley EFI 300-246
Holley EFI HI-RAM 105MM Plenum Top - As Cast Finish
*** The front and rear height measurements listed...
Part TypeEngine Intake Manifold£485.99 inc VAT£404.99 ex VAT -
Holley EFI 300-245
Holley EFI HI-RAM 95MM Plenum Top - As Cast Finish
*** The front and rear height measurements listed...
Part TypeEngine Intake Manifold£446.99 inc VAT£372.49 ex VAT -
Holley EFI 300-244
Holley 351W Ford Hi-Ram EFI Manifold Base
*** This Holley Hi-Ram intake manifold series is...
Part TypeEngine Intake Manifold£1,024.99 inc VAT£854.16 ex VAT -
Holley EFI 300-229
Holley Hi-Ram Lower Manifold - GM LS7 - LS7 EFI Base Only
These parts should be used for the following...
Part TypeEngine Intake Manifold£1,151.99 inc VAT£959.99 ex VAT -
Holley EFI 300-227
Holley Hi-Ram Lower Manifold - GM LS1/LS2/LS6 - LS1/LS2/LS6 Cathedral
These parts should be used for the following...
Part TypeEngine Intake Manifold£1,036.00 inc VAT£863.33 ex VAT -
Holley EFI 300-208BK-2
Holley Hi-Ram Intake Plenum Top Only-Black Finish - Hi-Ram, Plenum
Hi-Ram, Plenum Top Only, Blank Flange
Part TypeEngine Intake Manifold£343.99 inc VAT£286.66 ex VAT -
Holley EFI 300-207BK-2
Holley Hi-Ram Intake Plenum Top Only - 2 X 4150 - Flat Black Finish
Bolts thread into lid downwards through the intake...
Part TypeEngine Intake Manifold£301.99 inc VAT£251.66 ex VAT -
Holley EFI 300-126
Holley Mid-Rise Intake - GM LS1/LS2/LS6 W/ 95mm Top
Recalibration of the ECU may be required when...
Part TypeEngine Intake Manifold£1,187.99 inc VAT£989.99 ex VAT -
Holley EFI 300-125
Holley LS Hi-Ram EFI Manifold GM LS7 - LS7 EFI fits 1 x 105MM
*** The front and rear height measurements listed...
Part TypeEngine Intake Manifold£1,516.99 inc VAT£1,264.16 ex VAT -
Holley EFI 300-116
Holley Hi-Ram Intake - GM LS3/L92
*** The front and rear height measurements listed...
Part TypeEngine Intake Manifold£1,324.00 inc VAT£1,103.33 ex VAT -
Holley Sniper EFI 839031
Collecteur d'admission SNIPER EFI HI-RAM pour Coyote (à partir de 2015) - Collecteur d'admission Sniper EFI en tôle d'acier
Admission Holley Sniper EFI en tôle fabriquée
Part TypeEngine Intake Manifold£890.99 inc VAT£742.49 ex VAT
Choosing an intake manifold for a V8 engine swap comes down to three decisions: design type, engine family fitment, and how you're delivering fuel. Get all three right and the manifold works with the engine's power band rather than against it. Get one wrong and you'll either lose low-end torque on a street car or leave peak power on the table on a track build.
We stock dual plane and single plane intake manifolds alongside the full Holley Hi-Ram and Lo-Ram EFI range for LS, LT, and Coyote applications. Holley, Weiand, and BTR represented, all shipped from UK stock.
Choosing the right intake manifold for your V8 build
The intake manifold is one of the few components where a single swap can meaningfully shift where the engine makes its power, without touching the heads, the cam, or the short block. Dual plane and single plane intake manifolds produce measurably different torque curves on identical engines. On an LS engine swap, fitting the right EFI manifold architecture can be the difference between a build that drives well on the road and one that idles poorly and frustrates on the commute.
The decision is straightforward once you know the three things that matter: what design type suits your RPM target, which manifold fits your engine family, and whether you're running a carburettor, traditional EFI, or a modern throttle body setup.
What to look for
Design type: dual plane, single plane, or EFI-specific
Manifold design governs where in the RPM range the engine produces its best cylinder filling. A dual plane manifold uses a divided plenum with longer, separated runners. The longer runner path builds intake charge velocity at low and mid RPM, which translates to strong torque from idle through to around 5,500 RPM. For a street-driven car, a restomod, or anything that spends time at partial throttle in traffic, dual plane is the correct architecture.
A single plane manifold uses an open, undivided plenum with shorter runners. The open plenum allows the engine to breathe freely at high RPM but reduces charge velocity at low RPM. The torque curve shifts up the rev range. For a track day car, a dedicated drag build, or an engine that will spend its working life above 4,000 RPM, single plane gives back what it takes away.
EFI-specific manifolds, particularly the Holley Hi-Ram and Lo-Ram designs, are purpose-built for fuel-injected applications and allow configurations that carburettor manifolds cannot accommodate: individual throttle bodies, dual throttle body setups, blower-hat arrangements, and high-mount plenum designs that clear tight engine bays on LS and Coyote engine swaps.
Engine family and port fitment
An intake manifold is machined to match the intake port geometry of a specific cylinder head. Cathedral port, rectangular port, and D-port LS heads are not interchangeable. Small-block Chevrolet and small-block Ford manifolds share nothing. Coyote manifolds are specific to generation (pre-2015, 2015-2020 GT350, 2019-2022 Bullitt variants differ in throttle body attachment and port geometry).
Before selecting a manifold, confirm the cylinder head port style on your engine. For LS builds this typically means identifying whether you have Gen III cathedral port heads (LS1, LS2, LS6) or Gen IV rectangular port heads (LS3, L92, LS7). The manifold note and the engine family it lists are the authoritative check, not the engine code alone.
Fuel delivery architecture
Carburetted builds use manifolds designed to mount a four-barrel carburettor on a square-bore or spread-bore flange. Traditional EFI builds use manifolds with injector bungs and a throttle body mounting pad, often similar in external geometry to a carburetted manifold but ported and machined for injector bosses. Modern EFI manifolds for LS and Coyote applications, such as the Holley Lo-Ram and Hi-Ram range, go further: they are designed around the EFI system's fuel rail architecture, plenum volume, and throttle body count from the outset, rather than being adapted from a carburettor design.
If you are running a Holley Sniper, Terminator X, or similar self-learning EFI on a small-block Ford or traditional V8, a conventional EFI manifold or even a quality carburettor manifold with throttle body adaptor will work. If you are building an LS or Coyote swap with a purpose-built EFI management system, the Hi-Ram or Lo-Ram architecture gives you the flexibility to configure the induction system correctly from the start.
Where the criteria pull against each other
Street drivability and peak power point in opposite directions. A dual plane manifold gives you the torque and idle quality a street car needs, but it limits top-end breathing. A single plane gives you peak power but makes a street car feel flat below 3,500 RPM.
Hi-Ram manifolds offer maximum plenum volume and throttle body flexibility but add significant height. On a classic car chassis with a tight bonnet line, a Lo-Ram design will clear the bonnet where a Hi-Ram will not. The Lo-Ram trades some peak flow for packaging. On most UK street builds the Lo-Ram is the more practical choice; on dedicated power builds where bonnet clearance is not a constraint, Hi-Ram is the better architecture.
Installation complexity also varies. EFI manifolds that require individual throttle bodies or custom fuel rails take more time and more ancillaries than a single-carburettor dual plane on the same engine. Budget both the parts cost and the build time when comparing options.
Which manifold to pick
Street-driven carburetted V8 (small-block Chevy, small-block Ford, LS with carb conversion): start with a dual plane. The broader torque curve suits road driving. A single plane is the wrong choice unless the car will rarely see traffic.
Naturally aspirated track build or dedicated drag car: single plane, matched to the head port style and the intended RPM ceiling. Confirm runner length against the engine's target power band.
LS engine swap with EFI management (LS1/LS2/LS6 cathedral port): the Holley Lo-Ram range is the practical starting point. It suits both street and mild track use, supports standard and dual throttle body configurations, and clears most engine bays.
LS3 or L92 rectangular port build with higher power targets: the Ultra Lo-Ram design suits engines making more power and operating higher in the RPM range, where the optimised runner geometry earns its keep.
Coyote engine swap, 2015-2020 GT350 or 2019-2022 Bullitt generation: the Holley Ultra Lo-Ram for those specific build years retains OEM throttle body fitment while enabling modern EFI management. It is the most straightforward path to a running Coyote swap without fabricating a custom throttle body mount.
Top picks for LS and Coyote intake manifolds
Holley Lo-Ram Manifold Kit Single Injector, LS3/L92 is the go-to choice for LS3 and L92-headed builds running a single throttle body EFI setup. The Lo-Ram profile keeps overall height in check, which matters on any swap where the bonnet line is a concern. It supports standard EFI management systems including Holley and non-Holley ECUs when used with the appropriate sensor provisions. A solid choice for a street build that may occasionally see track days.
Holley Ultra Lo-Ram Manifold Kit Single Injector, LS3/L92 steps up the runner and plenum geometry for builds where the engine will operate at higher RPM and needs greater top-end flow. It uses the same low-profile architecture as the standard Lo-Ram but with runner geometry optimised for higher-output naturally aspirated or mild forced induction builds. The right choice when the LS3 or L92 engine is built past stock power levels.
Holley EFI Ultra Lo-Ram Ford Coyote, 2015-2020 GT350 and 2019-2022 is the correct manifold for Coyote swaps based on the GT350 generation engine or the 2019-2022 Bullitt-spec engine. OEM throttle body fitment means no adaptor plates or custom fabrication at that junction. For a restomod or a classic American iron project built around a Coyote donor, it removes one of the more awkward fitment questions from the build.
Holley Hi-Ram Lower Manifold, LS1/LS2/LS6 serves the cathedral port LS family (LS1, LS2, LS6) and suits both carburetted and EFI applications where maximum plenum volume is needed. The Hi-Ram architecture gives more room for high-flow throttle body configurations and suits builds where bonnet clearance is not a limiting factor. It is also the right choice for an LS-based engine that will eventually run boost, where plenum volume becomes more relevant.
For engine management to run any of these EFI manifolds correctly, see the Holley EFI collection.
Frequently asked questions
What is the difference between a Hi-Ram and a Lo-Ram intake manifold?
The Hi-Ram and Lo-Ram are both Holley EFI manifold architectures, but they differ in plenum height and overall stack dimensions. The Hi-Ram sits taller and offers greater plenum volume, which suits high-output builds where airflow at peak RPM is the priority and bonnet clearance is available. The Lo-Ram uses a lower profile plenum that fits under tight bonnet lines in classic car chassis and most engine-swapped road cars, while still supporting single or dual throttle body configurations. For most UK street swaps, the Lo-Ram fits where the Hi-Ram does not.
Will a single plane manifold work on a street-driven car?
It will fit and function, but the driving experience suffers at the RPM range street driving actually uses. Single plane manifolds reduce intake charge velocity at low and mid RPM, which shows up as a flat throttle response below 3,500-4,000 RPM. On a car that sees motorways, roundabouts, and stop-start traffic, that feels poor. On a car used exclusively on track or strip where the engine stays above 4,000 RPM, the single plane earns its place. If the car has both uses, a dual plane is the more practical choice.
Do I need a specific EFI manifold if I am running throttle body injection rather than a carburettor?
It depends on the type of EFI. A self-learning throttle body injection system (Holley Sniper or similar) that mounts where a carburettor would sit can run on a standard carburettor-pattern manifold with no modification. A port-injection EFI system needs a manifold with injector bosses machined into the runners. The Holley Hi-Ram and Lo-Ram range is purpose-built for port injection and supports fuel rail mounting directly. If you are converting from a carburettor to port injection, a new manifold is part of that conversion.
Which intake manifold fits an LS engine in a classic car chassis with a low bonnet line?
The Lo-Ram profile is built for this situation. It keeps the overall height of the induction system lower than a Hi-Ram or a conventional tall-plenum EFI manifold, which matters when the original engine was a short-block unit and the bonnet line is close. Both the standard Lo-Ram and Ultra Lo-Ram for LS3/L92 applications fit this scenario. Confirm overall installed height including the throttle body before committing, as throttle body selection affects the final stack height.
How much power can changing the intake manifold actually add?
On a stock or mildly modified V8, a manifold change is not a large power gain on its own. The value is in matching the manifold to the rest of the engine's specification so power is not being lost to a mismatched component. On a purpose-built performance engine where the heads, cam, and compression are already optimised, the manifold choice can shift peak power by 15-30 bhp and move the torque curve noticeably. The gains come from correct matching, not from the manifold in isolation.
Will Holley EFI intake manifolds work with non-Holley ECUs?
The manifolds themselves are passive components and have no ECU dependency. The fuel rails, injector bungs, and port geometry are compatible with any ECU that supports the injector type and fuel rail configuration in use. Holley Hi-Ram and Lo-Ram manifolds are commonly run with Haltech, MoTeC, AEM, and other ECU platforms. The manifold note for each specific part lists any fitment or sensor provisions to confirm. For Coyote-specific manifolds, OEM throttle body compatibility extends to any ECU that supports the Ford electronic throttle body protocol.



