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I think HPI blew their turbo at 0.7 or 0.8 bar. That was on the track though, so it would have been held at that for a while. I run my R33 turbo at 14psi, but it's only ever at that for a small amount of time, so it's pretty safe. I can guarantee you it'd blow on the track. What kind of application will you be using it for (ie street, track, drags etc)?

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There are two problems with the standard turbo, both centred around the ceramic exhaust turbine.

Firstly, being ceramic the turbine is sweated/bonded onto the common shaft and therefore it does not like too much resistance ie; the exhaust is pushing the turbine while the compressor is trying to move air into the engine. Too much resistance (boost) and the turbine and the shaft part company.

The second problem is one of heat, the ceramic turbine will only handle a certain amount of heat, coupled with this resistance. The heat builds up over several minutes of very hard driving (say on a circuit) and the turbine shatters or parts company with the shaft. Leaning out the engine to achieve more horsepower also increases the temperature of the exhaust.

So to answer your question, our experience has been that 0.8 bar (12 lbs) is OK for a road car as long as it is only in short bursts so that the heat does not build up. If you do any circuit work or long distance high speed stuff, then 0.7 bar (10 lbs) may well be the safe max.

With a really good intercooler, pipework and Power FC tuning we have achieved 0.8 bar (12 lbs) on a 220 RWKW road car reliably. But 5 hard laps on the circuit and the smoke escaped.

Sorry that this is a complex answer to your questions but it is a complex scenario.

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