Turbo size on TD engines
Moderators: daewoomofo, Moderators Group
Turbo size on TD engines
i have seen somme diesel that are turboed and i couldn't help noticing that the turbo on those cars are relativly small compared to the ones usualy on petrol engines... why is that?
is it because the diesel engine doesn't rev that high so it has much lower CFM that any petrol engine so the air supply it needs is about half what a standard petrol engine would need??
MMamdouh
is it because the diesel engine doesn't rev that high so it has much lower CFM that any petrol engine so the air supply it needs is about half what a standard petrol engine would need??
MMamdouh
Driving is the utmost fun you can have with your pants on!
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I have noticed the same thing...... extremely small turbos on diesel motors. I'm not entirely sure why, but I would think it is because of it being naturaly low revving....... so you would want boost right away almost off idle. Also diesels have more alot more torque than hp usually which ends up giving you really good low and mid but poor top end. (At least this is what I notice when I drive VW TDI golf/jetta). So I guess the turbo is just sized to the characteristics of the motor.
2004 Optra/Forenza/Lacetti - 225whp - Haltech Sprint500 - CT12B - Getrag F28 6spd - KW V3 Coilovers - FX35 Retrofit
2002 IS300 5MT - 615whp - AEM EMS - GT4088R - Built 9.5CR - R154 - TRD LSD - SupraTT T/B - Varex - LS430 Retrofit
2002 IS300 5MT - 615whp - AEM EMS - GT4088R - Built 9.5CR - R154 - TRD LSD - SupraTT T/B - Varex - LS430 Retrofit
well... you are right as far as the amout of torque a diesel engine produce and indeed it lacks HP at top end and thats why those engines make use of a turbo.
the point it - in my opinion - is that the top end of a diesel engine is something arround 4000 ~ 4500 RPM so the amount of exhaust exiting as well as the amout of air entring the engine at diesel top end revs is almos half what a petrol engine suck/produce when it is revving at 7000 RPM... this is the only logical explanation i could get.
can someone provide any more feedback/info on this??
MMamdouh
the point it - in my opinion - is that the top end of a diesel engine is something arround 4000 ~ 4500 RPM so the amount of exhaust exiting as well as the amout of air entring the engine at diesel top end revs is almos half what a petrol engine suck/produce when it is revving at 7000 RPM... this is the only logical explanation i could get.
can someone provide any more feedback/info on this??
MMamdouh
Driving is the utmost fun you can have with your pants on!
Check out my ride: http://www.cardomain.com/ride/567267
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diesel engines needs about 30-35% more air to produce the same HP according to petrol engines.... usually they produce higher boost also. on the other hand diesel engines doesn't rev above 4500rpm and that's why diesel turbo has different turbo/compressor ratio than petrol one.
DAEWOO NUBIRA II 2,0turbo (K04+2,5"exhaust tuned with SMT7) CDX WAGON 222222km so far
350KM@470Nm by GT28RS+N2O coming soon
350KM@470Nm by GT28RS+N2O coming soon
forgot to say that so many of them setups got no WG... is it because the turbo doesn't put too much pressure in the first place due to the fact it never spins that fast because of the low revving engine it is hooked up to??
MMamdouh
MMamdouh
Driving is the utmost fun you can have with your pants on!
Check out my ride: http://www.cardomain.com/ride/567267
Check out my ride: http://www.cardomain.com/ride/567267
i am lost....
whats the difference between pressure and flow? or in other words what does flow got to do with boosted applications? doesn't the WG open at certain "pressure" rather than certain "flow"?
how can flow be a deciding factor on wether to have a WG or not?
MMamdouh
whats the difference between pressure and flow? or in other words what does flow got to do with boosted applications? doesn't the WG open at certain "pressure" rather than certain "flow"?
how can flow be a deciding factor on wether to have a WG or not?
MMamdouh
Driving is the utmost fun you can have with your pants on!
Check out my ride: http://www.cardomain.com/ride/567267
Check out my ride: http://www.cardomain.com/ride/567267
simple if you have 2 hoose
one is 1" diameter and the other 3" diameter
both can hold ... lets say ... 10psi
but the 3" one can flow a lot more of ... lets say water than the 1" @ the same pressure
one is 1" diameter and the other 3" diameter
both can hold ... lets say ... 10psi
but the 3" one can flow a lot more of ... lets say water than the 1" @ the same pressure
Mitsubishi Eclipse GST 304whp 319tq @22psi w EVO 3 16G Daily Driven
DAEWOO Nubira 2.2L Turbo 217whp 204tq @13psi SOLD
ok... i know the physical difference between both terms but what i am not getting is why you don't need WG on a TD if it doesn't give so much flow yet it produces as much pressure as the turbo on a pertol engine?
as far as i know the WG opens at a certain pressure so given the fact that petrol and diesel engines run turbos to almost same pressure then you need to control that pressure... right?
or is it just the fact that you are controling the flow in terms of pressure so at say... 10 psi you are getting enough flow for the petrol engine and you can't go over that but on the diesel 10 psi is not that dangerous flow so you won't need a WG?
sorry i am asj\king too much but i am really lost here.
MMamdouh
as far as i know the WG opens at a certain pressure so given the fact that petrol and diesel engines run turbos to almost same pressure then you need to control that pressure... right?
or is it just the fact that you are controling the flow in terms of pressure so at say... 10 psi you are getting enough flow for the petrol engine and you can't go over that but on the diesel 10 psi is not that dangerous flow so you won't need a WG?
sorry i am asj\king too much but i am really lost here.
MMamdouh
Driving is the utmost fun you can have with your pants on!
Check out my ride: http://www.cardomain.com/ride/567267
Check out my ride: http://www.cardomain.com/ride/567267
Are you 100% sure that TDIs don't have WG? If they don't I would like to know why as well. My best guess would be because of the low revs = less flow, the turbo would never get into an overboost condition or spin too fast. But this is just a guess.......... anyone here whos sure ?
2004 Optra/Forenza/Lacetti - 225whp - Haltech Sprint500 - CT12B - Getrag F28 6spd - KW V3 Coilovers - FX35 Retrofit
2002 IS300 5MT - 615whp - AEM EMS - GT4088R - Built 9.5CR - R154 - TRD LSD - SupraTT T/B - Varex - LS430 Retrofit
2002 IS300 5MT - 615whp - AEM EMS - GT4088R - Built 9.5CR - R154 - TRD LSD - SupraTT T/B - Varex - LS430 Retrofit
you can use small turbo without WG even on petrol engines these turbos are very small and their main purpose is to improve torque not HP. try to put something like GT12 in over 2.0liter engine - you won't get more power (probably less ) but your torque will be great at low rev. in this case WG won't be necessary because GT12 won't produce enough FLOW in 2liter engine to reach high boostMMamdouh wrote:ok... i know the physical difference between both terms but what i am not getting is why you don't need WG on a TD if it doesn't give so much flow yet it produces as much pressure as the turbo on a pertol engine?
as far as i know the WG opens at a certain pressure so given the fact that petrol and diesel engines run turbos to almost same pressure then you need to control that pressure... right?
or is it just the fact that you are controling the flow in terms of pressure so at say... 10 psi you are getting enough flow for the petrol engine and you can't go over that but on the diesel 10 psi is not that dangerous flow so you won't need a WG?
sorry i am asj\king too much but i am really lost here.
MMamdouh
DAEWOO NUBIRA II 2,0turbo (K04+2,5"exhaust tuned with SMT7) CDX WAGON 222222km so far
350KM@470Nm by GT28RS+N2O coming soon
350KM@470Nm by GT28RS+N2O coming soon
thank you all for the clarification.
MMamdouh
MMamdouh
Driving is the utmost fun you can have with your pants on!
Check out my ride: http://www.cardomain.com/ride/567267
Check out my ride: http://www.cardomain.com/ride/567267
Turbo TDi
I disconnected the W/G on my 2.5 TDi Pajero. Now I get up to 17psi instead of the 10-11 psi with W/G connected. That doesn´t give me much more power unless I increase the amount of fuel also. But what you don´t get with more boost on diesel, as opposed to petrol, is detonation. Just give it all the boost the turbo can handle and control the amount of fuel. What limits you is the resulting EGT. So in diesels you don´t worry about lean mixture but too rich mixture that produces more heat. (This applies if you have a relatively small turbo. If I had some mammoth turbo I would need a W/G no matter what.)
My 2cents anyway. Hope it makes sense.
Regards from the land of Ice.
My 2cents anyway. Hope it makes sense.
Regards from the land of Ice.