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I ran the BIG HX40 18cm2 on a 6.5td w/max fuel and 4.10 gear-sets it started to light up a 1.2k . Compounds do the best all around.I've run all kinds of ideas through my head. I have no experience with compounds but it seems like with them sized right it would be very useful.
I run a H1C with a H1E compressor housing and wheel. Pretty much the same as a HX35/HX40 hybrid. It has allowed me to swap all kinds of exhaust housings on there to try out. I've ran a 21cm, a 18cm, a 14cm that are all gateless. Now I'm running a 12cm gated. The bigger ones were great for towing but were laggy and smokey. The 14cm was pretty good all around but I don't tow as much as I just daily drive. Now with the 12cm gated it's much more enjoyable to daily drive but I haven't had a chance to tow with it yet.
Idk, when the engine didn’t have a lot of blow-by smacking the impeller, they lasted a long time. Frequently saw them break 300,000 miles.I've got a pile of those. Probably wouldn't ever have faith in any GM-X though.
RACOR has solved the oil hitting the turbine with their CCV.Idk, when the engine didn’t have a lot of blow-by smacking the impeller, they lasted a long time. Frequently saw them break 300,000 miles.
X-over is perhaps the most mis-understood of all pipes to BIG and you raise start of boost to a higher rpm.I've got an early style Banks turbo manifold and a civilian H1 passenger manifold for the driver's side. Gonna run a short crossover under the balancer. I'm hoping to be able to mount the primary close enough to the orginal position so I can use the exhaust without any modifications.
I agree. Raycor, Provent, even a diy but they often cost as much by time you figure it out to working the best.RACOR has solved the oil hitting the turbine with their CCV.
RACOR CCV 4500 does the trick even plumbed into the compressor inlet piping but some rely on a catch can.I agree. Raycor, Provent, even a diy but they often cost as much by time you figure it out to working the best.
I have a provent 200, but it is not a good unit for going under water like deep pond or small river, so I am thinking of selling it for a different unit.
Many think the oil hitting the turbo doesn’t affect it, another big misconception by the gm group just because ‘gm engineered it that way so it must be ok’. As if they didn’t pinch pennies everywhere else
It’s like, everything falls into one of 3 options in mechanical devices:
1. No effect- a theoretical possibility but then real world testing always shows this incorrect.
2. Positive effects like Increase in longevity, or power or mpg. Obviously no one in racing adds it to win... And long life semi trucks dont have it as an optional feature to pay more for oil misting into it.
3. Negative effects. We want as much air going through uninterrupted- but lets lose a little to oil instead. And blades spinning 10,000 rpm get smoother and sharper or collect micro weight in random spots and have a streak of oil randomly catching any dust particles that make it through to disturb air flow on blades.
Part of the ‘service’ offered at dealerships was to clean out all the oil and install a new cdr to help limit it. Hmm.
Crankcase pressure gets higher with more rpm. But cdr job is to limit the removal of the pressure at higher and highest rpm. We know from all classes of racing higher vacuum in crankcase is more power and more mpg. So why the cdr? Because you will suck the engine dry of oil in 5,000 miles of freeway driving without it, and even if people top off the oil, the turbos die sooner.
In the dealership when a turbo went out under warranty 2 things were checked to see if customer had to pay for it:
Oil changes done and cdr changes done on schedule. If either was missed - customer pays.
In compound turbos, it is still something I would install.
I was wondering about even more dramatic separation of turbos. Like a small 4 cylinder turbo. I remember one v10 where a guy did 2 small primary (one each bank) then they fed a single large secondary. I’ll try to find the pic.
How you do placement of them under the hood has my interest peaked. Move batteries underneath and relocating fenderwell items to open up? On of the cool things about the square bodies- room for extras.
No, I get it. I dealt with vacuum system on dry sump and wet sump engines. Both race and equipment.I think you need to reexamine how the CDR works Will. It's wide open until high boost and then starts to close. So the crankcase is being exposed to maximum available vacuum until the boost comes up, which is also when the vacuum gets higher. So IMO the CDRs job is simply to keep oil in the crankcase during high vacuum situations.