If they made the DB2 with an AFC...Now that would be a little easier but then most would disconnect it anyway...:rof:
:crazy: Some of the Oldsmobile diesels do have an AFC on them it is in the docs I posted up.
Smoke has to clear up. Light haze is about all you can get away with without being phoned in in emissions states. Smoke at altitude means you have choked your GMx turbo where it is putting out heat not airflow/boost.
I have always felt a 6.2 needed a turbo simply to clear up the smoke going over Eisenhower tunnel in CO. So my vote is less smoke than a NA 6.2. Smoke is wasted fuel to the 6.2/6.5 economy crowd. Smokers buy a different rig usually... A 1988 4x4 suburban we had would get 18 MPG driven hard and the 2wd was said to get 24 by people we talked to back in the day. My 6.5 turbo is lucky to get 14 unloaded.
However getting 6 PSI of boost from simply hitting the rev limiter in neutral from the factory turbo is too small. It needs boost from load/heat NOT simply airflow. I wonder is a belt drive supercharger would get better results for no smoke with the same MPG as the small GM turbo?
Interesting: Turning up the fuel and boost on my 1993 did not change the MPG under load, just the MPH/power was better up hills.