Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Guest INASNT

if u r gonna spend all that $$ on a new turbo then invest a little more in the fuel system and aftermarket comp otherwise the $$ u spent of the turbo will be a waste of time coz u wouldnt be able to run it to its full capabilities. And i assume u already got a fmic for the new turbo?

I have seen a car run BIG turbo without upgrade to his ecu (not sure about fuel system), it is now sitting in the mechanics w/shop with blown motor and turbo.

He was told to leave the car as it was until the wolf was plugged in. Not satisfied with the power (and knowing it's potential) this guy started stuffing around with boost, etc. Then decides to take it for a thrash with his mates. Motor blew and fired something into the exhaust turbine of his newly hi-flow/reconditioned ($2200, 450hp) turbo.

Moral of the story, invest in the support systems first or else you WILL end up spending more. Plus, a replacement ecu will give you power gains throught the whole rev. range. I know, i have one and was surpprised with the differance.

yeah the reason i asked is cos i can get a new to4/t3 turbo this week only for half price. but i do not have all the money to spend getting everything else right now.

i plan on getting a computer a bigger front mount boost controller all that but can i run that turbo at standard boost for the mean time.

and get everything else bit by bit???

my car is sitting in my workshop with no turbo.

and this turbo will bolt on.

so just to get the car running i need a turbo. so if i buy this one then next month get the comp(with standard boost still) then get a bigger front mount.

then dual satge boost.

would that work??

cheers

Dude, it should be alright BUT you must keep the boost down AND drive like an old mole.

If your turbo flows more air than the injectors can fuel, by by ringlands and possibly more = rebuild engine.

Boost is not so relevant as air flow, a bigger turbo will flow more air at the same boost pressure as a smaller turbo - everything else being equal. If you fit the turbo, try just using say 5psi, as 7psi is stock boost. I know that the stocker will flow alot more than that, but for example Whasisname is making 257rwkw with only 13psi (or there abouts). My car is at 89% (injector duty cycle) with .85bar on a stock turbo, so it is really important to keep the boost down until you know what it is doing. And whatever you do, drive conservatively.

The other mods you are planning are good, but with a bigger turbo you will probably need a bigger fuel pump and fuel pressure reg as well as a new clutch. This will become more apparent when you get the engine management on and put the car on a dyno to tune it.

i think the term "hi flow " as mod to turbos is used a rough description.

Some places do hi flows and then other places do HIFLOWs.

meaning it all depends on what you want.

Different wheels, housings, and other stuff make up the final package. Thats why they vary in price so much. Can get them done for around $800, and then the good ones for $2200.

All depends on how much you want to pay, and what power you want it for.

one hi flow could produce "x" amount of power, and another hi flow could produce another amount.

good for street though.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


×
×
  • Create New...