Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Million dollar question:)

Depends on alot of things, capacity of your engine, manifold design, head design, cams, timing etc not to mention turbine AR ratio, wheel trim, exhaust back pressure - and probably a dozen plus other things.

The compressor map only shows what the compressor is capable of doing at certain speeds. As Sydneykid alluded to, careful selection of turbine etc.

This is why I am leaning toward a small turbine housing to start with. The other thing you could do is look at what other people are running, and taking into account all of the above - make an educated guesstamate - then be prepared to change a few things once its on if its not quite what you were expecting or after.

EDIT: why do you think that performance companies like to keep their specs so secret? You are going to be up for a bit of R&D - and the more research, the less likely to need developement!

Hi Inasnt.

If you plan to run 1.0 bar boost, looking at that compressor map, that is going to be at about 90,000 compressor RPM.

Now, what you need is an exhaust turbine and housing a/r combination that will spin up the compressor to the required RPM. The tip speed of the exhaust turbine is just about the same as the exhaust gas velocity inside the exhaust housing scroll.

Now comes the compromise part. You can reach the required exhaust velocity by forcing the exhaust through a small exhaust housing, BUT the exhaust back pressure is going to be very high.

So a small a/r is going to boost early, but it will have high back pressure.

Once it reaches 1.0 Bar, the wastegate will open and hold the shaft speed close to that required 90,000 RPM. It will also hold the exhaust back pressure at about the same level required to reach that 90,000 RPM right up to redline.

Or you can run a larger a/r and reach the required exhaust velocity at a higher engine RPM with less exhaust back pressure. The lower back pressure will produce more engine power at the same boost level.

So you get a choice, lots of low RPM boost and reduced top end power, or lots of lag, and huge top end power. Take your pick.

One factor though, if that special exhaust housing you have, turns out to be not what you want, you might be stuffed finding another one with a T3 flange and more suitable a/r.

The cams you run depend mostly on exhaust back pressure. Small cams with small exhaust turbine housing, big cams with big exhaust turbine housing. Try to keep some proportionality between valve overlap and exhaust back pressure for best results.

It really all depends on how peaky you want it to be.

go the 0.84 A/R... cos the feeling of the car when it just keeps pulling hard all the time is awesome!

my old skyline fell off in the top revs and it loses the excitement... my new skyline is AWESOME!!!! and i think i have a large exhaust A/R (not exactly sure) and a 0.70 A/R Compressor.

Much fun to be had!!! :)

Hi INASNT, what you gunna do about the internals? This turbo will produce too much combustion pressure for standard RB25DET internals. You could turn down the boost or limit the shaft RPM wiht a small turbine and cover, but that's a band aid. You would be better off with a turbo that more closely matches the power potential.

Hope that clarifies.

Guest INASNT

sydneykid!

i dont plan on running more than 1 bar boost with this turbo, and hey if it blows i will put in forged pistons, short penned rods etc. I was goona do that anyway but i thought let it be, and if it blows then change it!

At 1 bar i should be right shouldnt i?

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


  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • Oh bugger ! Your right ! Good old hydrogen sulfide. Takes me back to the good old school days ! 
    • I've owned a few scooters over the years, a Vespa PX oil burner was my first scooter, followed by a few others, including a little 50cc BeeWee that I used as a barracks bike, and I've had a blast on all of them, they really are the cheapest for of city/suburb transport around The only issue with scooters in Australia is lots of people look down on them due to their size,  maybe they need a big bike to make up for something else where they are lacking, unlike Europe and Asia where every man an their dog owns one, and now that filtering is legal in NSW, local traffic is never a issue Not to say I haven't owned my share of big cc bikes over the years, but they were for more blasting through the hills or Hwy riding where it needed to sit on Hwy speeds Safety wise, I ride like everyone is always trying to kill me, everyone is running a red, or running stop/give way signs, or generally asleep at the wheel, which most people are duringtheir commute, I also ride really safe, and give myself, and everyone else enough room in case I need to pull some hasty evasive actions, I've done a few rider training days over the years, which has come in handy on more than a few occasions  As for mods, there's nothing really, and yes your right about aftermarket exhaust, all you get is loud and obnoxious noises from them, like every 250-300 cc you hear with a aftermarket muffler, in saying this I did put a rear muffler from a 125 Aprilla on one of my old 125 scooters, it was horrendous and no amount of full face helmet and ear plugs would dampen that noise As for coming from the Harley, and what a overpriced POS that was, I no longer do big rides as my poor old busted joints ache after about 1/2 an hour of riding, long cruises are so much more enjoyable now in a car, so a big bike would be pointless   
    • Oh wow, it's easy to forget how cheap these can be. Probably the cheapest way to travel. Though people in cars here tend to be morons and I would not feel very safe. Were scooters ever big in Australia? It used to be the thing growing up in Europe ~20 years ago. 50/70/125ccm Peugeot or Yamaha and some others. Utterly obnoxious Polini race exhausts. Kick stands that slant as much as possible. So loud. So much noise for really not moving very fast at all. But it felt cool at the time. Not sure where I'm going with this, but there is an aftermarket for mopeds! Though I'd have pictured you more for a Goldwing kind of guy after growing out of the Harley.
    • You need to know I am sorry for this.  
    • As the MX5 isn't apparently "manly" enough, and I need something for runs to the local shops, and also take to my part time job at the salon, basically I can keep the MX5 away from car parks and stuff......like "flying lockers", I was wondering what I could buy to fix this issue LOL, I pick up a new Yamaha 125 Delight this arvo from Trooper Lu, basically a R1 that you can fit a slab of beer on between your feet, also, it was $29400 cheaper than a R1, so actually it's 2 x better than a R1    
×
×
  • Create New...