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From what I have gathered the CKO HX40w2 is the step "down" child of the full sized HX40 (w).The hx40w2 has been known to come with a couple of different wheels and no info regarding which one you're buying. To my knowledge the ATT, other than a few problem child ones that slim fixed, are all the same. IIRC the specs are available over at the place as someone measured one.
If I'm going to drop $1.1+ k on a turbo it had better come with the specs.......
I seem to remember a Merlin IP that was pricey and w/o specs I would not spend a penny on such pie in the sky item.
Interesting thoughts however; the tuner not knowing the specs tuning becomes a shot in the dark however; diesels are more forgiving so you just enjoy that turbo..........and I'll stick to Holsets or a HOLSET spec CKO.That's a shame. You'll miss out on a good turbo. Been running mine for about 10 years now with no complaints. Heath redid my tune to more match the ATT and it runs really well. My only issue is it smokes pretty good at higher elevation and if I really get on it. But Heath reflashed it for me for $50 vs $400 for the KOJO. So recently I decided i had had enough of the smoke and had an extra computer so I sent it in to have a KOJO tune burned. Was not impressed at all. Sent it back because my Heath tune put it to shame. So I just got my computer back a week ago that they made a few tweeks I guess but still haven't installed it.
Interesting thoughts however; the tuner not knowing the specs tuning becomes a shot in the dark however; diesels are more forgiving so you just enjoy that turbo..........and I'll stick to Holsets or a HOLSET spec CKO.
Does anybody have any actual specs for an ATT turbo? What other turbo might be similar? I have searched here and everywhere else that I can think of but haven't turned up anything.
Beating a dead horse here.The selling points for me on an ATT were:
- it developed much less psi (low teens) to deliver the same power as other brands which needed much higher psi (low to mid twenties).
- it was less complex with no wastegate.
The sum of those two was cost avoidance during install (did not need to consider head studs or other internal motor mods just for the turbo) and lower risk of a moving part failure.
One thing I learned since the ATT conversion was that post-compressor to pre-turbine pressures need to have as close to a 1:1 ratio as possible no matter what turbo and tune was in use. To date, I have only seen one person start to tread into that water for the 6.5. Point is, if anybody is going to seriously look at a turbo and cast dispersions about any brand for lack of published spec's, the credibility factor goes down if only focusing on boost numbers or where in the RPM curve the turbo comes to life. Just say-in