Chinke82
Member
- Location
- Houston, Tx
yes you would still have the tune after the turbo install. It would be used to mainly clear codes and "help" with idle.
EXACTLY what I was thinking. Gotta keep it in the family.![]()
To answer your concern about the cats - he suggested we custom Y the cats together (starting with 3" downpipe) - using both O2 sensors like stock. Every connection on the hot side will use V-band clamps. Cold side will be silicone couplers.
Also suggested controlling noise by piping the BOV outlet into the exhaust. This idea was from his experience with the supercharged FX he did. He thinks the BOV would be too loud for my build philosophy - it crosses the luxury line I'm trying to maintain. The price he quoted is inside my limit, meaning I can do this as soon as the details are ironed out.
These are starting points in terms of ideas for the build, but I'm posting them to get some opinions. I can tweak this up until he/we start buying parts.
Did I mention the dyno tune is freakin awesome???
Also suggested controlling noise by piping the BOV outlet into the exhaust. This idea was from his experience with the supercharged FX he did. He thinks the BOV would be too loud for my build philosophy - it crosses the luxury line I'm trying to maintain. The price he quoted is inside my limit, meaning I can do this as soon as the details are ironed out.
These are starting points in terms of ideas for the build, but I'm posting them to get some opinions. I can tweak this up until he/we start buying parts.
Did I mention the dyno tune is freakin awesome???
If you're worried about noise, definitely have the wastegate recirculate into the exhaust. I had an open wastegate dump on my old car and though it sounded cool, the noise was crazy when it was wide open under full throttle. Plus it'll be better for the environment if you pipe it back in before the cats. Also, since you're maintaining a luxury feel, you'd probably prefer not to smell raw gas inside the car which is what sometimes happens if you don't plumb the wastegate back in.
I'm thinking that's actually a bigger turbo than I really need as it will make up to 25psi no problem. Since I'm aiming for 8-10psi, I wonder if I can go smaller and get full boost even before 2000rpm. Also - what do you think about the suggestion to run twin wastegates?
a bigger turbo can create more cfm's at a lower boost level than a smaller turbo can, so you can make the same HP at say 7psi with a large turbo that a smaller turbo which might need to see maybe 8.5- 9psi or so to make the same hp... the pressure increase is what raises charge temps, so ~7psi with a larger turbo I guess you can get away without an intercooler maybe, but your sacrificing efficiency & increasing chance of detonation too, the only good thing about no intercooler is the turbo will need to make less boost overall too, in other words to see 7psi at the manifold you won't need to make 9 at the charger & then loose 2 psi to the intercooler, but the trade off of higher charge temps kinda narrows the gap in benefit there too. personally I'd intercool any turbo setup really, especially anything in the 8psi & better range. a centrifugal supercharger can get away without an intercooler more easily at lower boost levels because they don't raise the charge temps as much as a turbo... that being said I guess many builds have been done without an intercooler really, to me if your going that far though the intercooler is only a small expense compared to everything else...
size would probably be something in there gt35 range, more specifics would take more research & I haven't done much at all for larger singles to be able to really pick an actual suggestion, but again, I would think the person who is designing your setup would be the best to really choose a specific turbo. I'm assuming your looking to mount the turbo in front of the engine?
Yes - front of the engine, but lower in the bay, to try to minimize all runs.
So this might just be crazy, but it's also fun to think about:
What if I stuck with a larger turbo, no intercooler, but added water/meth injection to keep the temperatures down? I've seen injection kits that go for less than it would be for an intercooler + custom piping, for sure.
Actually I think I mention the twin scroll in the middle of this thread? Maybe it was in my blog or something. Definitely a consideration, but as you said - fabrication intensive. There is no existing manifold for the FX, but it seems to me a twin scroll manifold could be done with what is pretty much a custom Y pipe and a slightly modified set of good quality headers (like turbo is doing with his HR).
I've decided to stay with a single - not twins. Given that assumption, what turbo size would you recommend?
For my lower horsepower and boost goals, is an intercooler even necessary? Wondering if I could route from turbo directly to intake?
put it on the hot side, as close to the turbo as possible. also run the vacuum line from the bov directly to the throttle body- if you T it off to something else, response is diminished. Use the correct size line too.
Reasoning:
Your bypass valve is supposed to bypass unwanted pressure in the plumbing. If the bypass is on the cold side, then all of the high pressure from the turbo to the bypass has to flow through the intercooler to get out, which means it the venting will be slower, more gradual, not as sharp and not as quick. People will say this "keeps the air moving in the right direction"- however, air is always flowing into the engine, even at idle or after you let off and the throttle body shuts, the engine still breathes. The purpose of the bypass isnt to keep the engine breathing its to prevent COMPRESSOR SURGE. By placing the bov on the hot side:
the turbo gets a fast-as-possible response for relief of compressor surge
the release is more sharp, and faster, which on a maf car, is a large benefit (Due to the way the ECU cuts fuel) you will note that cars with bovs on the cold side, even a ssqv, will tend to backfire under light throttle conditions... because the ecu cuts the fuel but idle falls low enough for it to come back in with the bov still hanging open... and POP!
Air density at constant temp is related to pressure. whether the plumbing releases pressure on the cold side or hot side doesnt make a difference- the turbo still has to re-compress the column of air when you step on the gas. the air doesn't "keep moving" any more or less whichever side its on- the engine is always breathing, and unless you are shifting with the throttle body open, the column is going to lose its increased pressure ratio. oh, i still put some bov on the cold side, just for looks though. they looks cool right there by the throttle body. And they are quieter, more subtle. And the vacuum line is shorter, which means it opens even easier. Yes it backfires unnecessarily and yes the compressor surges slightly more than it should but... LOL it still serves its purpose.
if your running a MAF sensor you have to put it before the sensor too, you don't want to bleed off already metered air, because the ecu will add fuel for that air & if that air doesn't make it's way into the motor then you'll wind up creating a rich condition...