I still dont understand...
Why is it that the twin turbo kits(like GReddy) can be set to 8/8.5psi and pull 420+whp but it takes an ST kit (like Turbonetics) 9.5/10psi to make the same. Yet everyone feels that the twin kits are safe at those boost levels...and ST kits get cautioned on how high they push it. Why the difference in the numbers?
Help me out here...I'm curious...been searching...but still dont get it.
Help me out here...I'm curious...been searching...but still dont get it.
two small turbos vs. one bigger turbo, that's basically what it comes down to.
psi doesn't really mean squat, btw...so i'd be wary of throwing around boost numbers when you don't mention turbo differences or lb-min flow per turbo, or efficiency ranges of the compressors and turbines.
psi doesn't really mean squat, btw...so i'd be wary of throwing around boost numbers when you don't mention turbo differences or lb-min flow per turbo, or efficiency ranges of the compressors and turbines.
If you haven't read the book Maximum Boost by Corkey Bell yet you should purchase that and read. When you are done read it again. After the second time you should have a good fundamental understanding of turbochargers and how they operate as well as the answer to this question. I'm not being a d!ck just that its not an easy thing to explain and have you fully understand.
Originally Posted by MIAPLAYA
If you haven't read the book Maximum Boost by Corkey Bell yet you should purchase that and read. When you are done read it again. After the second time you should have a good fundamental understanding of turbochargers and how they operate as well as the answer to this question. I'm not being a d!ck just that its not an easy thing to explain and have you fully understand.
To talk about specific kits - excluding psi - The GReddy TT kit would have a higher flow or effeciency than a larger kit like the Turbonetics.
I guess what I'm really wondering is why the TT kits seem to come out of the box making more whp than the ST kits.
I guess what I'm really wondering is why the TT kits seem to come out of the box making more whp than the ST kits.
Originally Posted by Midnyte
To talk about specific kits - excluding psi - The GReddy TT kit would have a higher flow or effeciency than a larger kit like the Turbonetics.
I guess what I'm really wondering is why the TT kits seem to come out of the box making more whp than the ST kits.
I guess what I'm really wondering is why the TT kits seem to come out of the box making more whp than the ST kits.
Edit: The TT kits don't all come out of box making more then the ST kits. The Greddy kit at 5.6 PSI makes roughly 350-370 RWHP, ditto for the PE kit. The Turbonetics kit makes 365-380 RWHP at 8 PSI for the reason I listed above. Of course I'm talking out of box no tuning or modifying of pressure ratio.
Thanks bro...that makes sense now. I was looking at it as if the VQ could handle a certain whp number on a twin, why couldnt I up the boost on a single and get the same results (somehow thinking that the pressure had to be less on the single for it to yeild less results). I wasnt looking at it as a higher volume at at a lower pressure on the dual. So the simple answer is that the ST would have to put a lot more pressure on the engine and components to match the flow of the dual.
Thanks again,
-Blaise
Thanks again,
-Blaise
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Originally Posted by Midnyte
Thanks bro...that makes sense now. I was looking at it as if the VQ could handle a certain whp number on a twin, why couldnt I up the boost on a single and get the same results (somehow thinking that the pressure had to be less on the single for it to yeild less results). I wasnt looking at it as a higher volume at at a lower pressure on the dual. So the simple answer is that the ST would have to put a lot more pressure on the engine and components to match the flow of the dual.
Thanks again,
-Blaise
Thanks again,
-Blaise
A single lets say T70 turbo produces 500 CFM of air at 9 PSI
A pair of GT28RS turbos produce 475 CFM at 9 PSI of air.
For the same given pressure ratio the single is producing MORE air and thus more power.
Conversly lets look at this:
A single T62 produces 420 CFM of air at 9 PSI
A pair of GT28RS turbos produce 475 CFM of air at 9 PSI
For the same given pressure ratio in this scenario the smaller twins will produce more air and thus more power. Again these are examples and not actual numbers of any kind.
I would go into the single vs twin argument but it would take a lot of typing that quite frankly I just don't have time for right now. Best bet grab a copy of Maximum Boost. Theres no way I could break this down into the kind of detail available in that book.
Originally Posted by MIAPLAYA
If you haven't read the book Maximum Boost by Corkey Bell yet you should purchase that and read. When you are done read it again. After the second time you should have a good fundamental understanding of turbochargers and how they operate as well as the answer to this question. I'm not being a d!ck just that its not an easy thing to explain and have you fully understand.
Originally Posted by wtf no turbo
Its an easy answer..........volume
Looking at the smaller picture, different companies will use different dynos, and henceforth, get different numbers. Not saying that is the answer, just another variable.
Originally Posted by MIAPLAYA
Because the total Mass Flow of the two turbos at the given pressure ratio is greater then the Mass flow of the single turbo at the same pressure ratio.
I ordered the book.
Just waiting for it.
"PSI does not determine power potential...only the MASS of air. (lb/min)".
So the PSI only counts for how much pressure is spooling the turbo, not how much volume it is pushing into your manifold...got it.
So if a certain volume is deemed safe (with appropriate tune of course) on a twin, then the single 'should' be able to have the pressure increased to produce the same volume?
Just waiting for it."PSI does not determine power potential...only the MASS of air. (lb/min)".
So the PSI only counts for how much pressure is spooling the turbo, not how much volume it is pushing into your manifold...got it.
So if a certain volume is deemed safe (with appropriate tune of course) on a twin, then the single 'should' be able to have the pressure increased to produce the same volume?
Originally Posted by Midnyte
I ordered the book.
Just waiting for it.
"PSI does not determine power potential...only the MASS of air. (lb/min)".
So if a certain volume is deemed safe (with appropriate tune of course) on a twin, then the single 'should' be able to have the pressure increased to produce the same volume?
Just waiting for it."PSI does not determine power potential...only the MASS of air. (lb/min)".
So if a certain volume is deemed safe (with appropriate tune of course) on a twin, then the single 'should' be able to have the pressure increased to produce the same volume?
So you still need to match the twin or single turbocharger to the intended applications. Of course, if we are talking the difference in 8psi on the Greddy kit, vs. 10psi on the Turbonetics kit, then all is good.
exactly what I was talking about...
Which is why you would need to invest in cooling mods like water/alc/meth injection, oil coolers, etc...to dissapate the heat caused by increasing the load on the TC. Right?
-Blaise
Which is why you would need to invest in cooling mods like water/alc/meth injection, oil coolers, etc...to dissapate the heat caused by increasing the load on the TC. Right?
-Blaise
Originally Posted by Midnyte
exactly what I was talking about...
Which is why you would need to invest in cooling mods like water/alc/meth injection, oil coolers, etc...to dissapate the heat caused by increasing the load on the TC. Right?
-Blaise
Which is why you would need to invest in cooling mods like water/alc/meth injection, oil coolers, etc...to dissapate the heat caused by increasing the load on the TC. Right?
-Blaise



