With a good fab guy getting a supercharger to work with motor is the lease of your worries. Headers, exhaust...are in the same boat. Getting engine internals are also easy. My 12' 5.0 is stock because of the ECU. Once the ECU problem is taken care of the rest will fall into place!
Hyundai already has a supercharged 5.0 in their factory. But we will probably never see it.
But yes, tunning is the major hold up right now on doing any mods with good results.
Engine internals are far from easy. Anything you order would have to be custom made. It's only easy if you throw your bank account password at someone else to handle it.
It was a 4.6L and it is not a setup that was ever meant to be sold. The supercharger was done for show and the cylinder de-activation on its engine was a testing bed.
DRS - again, completely inaccurate. Not sure where you are getting the info from. You should cite your sources instead of blasting the forum with bad info.
BTW the Hyundai 5.0 liter is a GDI (direct-injected) which is how it produces about 20 more HP with the same displacement. And it costs a lot less to reverse engineer an engine than it does to develop it in-house, which is what Hyundai did.
"About 100 engineers were involved in the clean-sheet design, which took 48 months to develop at a cost of 260 billion won, according to Hyundai."
Two Ford Engineers that also are winding down the GT500 program (for now) are part of the source pool. They are impressed with the TAU, see the similarities and differences. The 4.6 and 5.0 may be a "clean sheet" just like Hyundai said their early Toyota designs were "clean sheet". Look, it does not matter. Ford has a great engine platform that has been licensed (Mercedes, back in 90s forward, and promoted on a Ford commercial with Germans running around the Ford engine plant on a golf cart), and used as a template by others (Jag, LR, Volvo V6, Mazda 4/V6).
The 5.0 Ford by design (no head change, open up heads to add DI) can handle either DI or port. As spoken by the engineers I stay in touch with (Old SCCA contacts). Back then they chose to use port injection because of the intake valves getting deposits with DI and a slight issue with PCV oil coming into the intake. Which they do not have an issue with the truck 5.4, 6.2, or the older 4.6. That issue is fixed now... Expect to see DI on Ford V8 platform, with a CPU mapping that does not run rich to prevent knocking like the 5.0 TAU does.
The TAU 5.0 is amazing.. Nothing smoother on acceleration, idle since the early 4.6 SOHC Fords with aluminum intakes (later went to Montaplast plastic intakes, which in addition to the head redesign made the 4.6 less smooth and quiet. Of course the TAU does GLH compared to any of those.
Anyway, some day there will be enough volume of these engines to redo the ECU mappings, and possible place a Supercharger on top (if it would not add any height). Uhmmm, maybe I will check in with Kenny Brown here in town and see if he has any interest in tackling this for a Genny and Equis.
Unless someone wants to be catapulted back to the stone age, there is no such thing as a "clean sheet" design. The whole point of technological advancement is to build on the past, and hopefully go forward.The 4.6 and 5.0 may be a "clean sheet" just like Hyundai said their early Toyota designs were "clean sheet".
2013 5.0 R Spec with custom CAI, electronic cutouts, resonator-delete, X-pipe. The 5.0 is leaving some power on the shelf; it runs RICH and would benefit from a tune to lean out the air-fuel. Without a tune, bolt-on mods will give you a handful of HP (the stock mufflers add backpressure, as do the cats and resonator) but help with throttle response. A 12.5:1 DI engine should make AT LEAST 90hp/L on 91 Octane. The 5.0 makes 87. Agree with what has been posted: a lot is lost to the slow shifting transmission and torque converter that takes time to lock-up. (The ZF 8 speed could teach our transmission a thing or two.) Enjoy your car. There's not a better all-round 429hp luxury ride out there for the price.
Pull out the air flap/door under you main air filter. Open the air box and take put the filter. See the door... ? Pull that piece up and out. Enjoy the new air flow.
This will help with response and you can do the same in front of the small air filter up front.