ftpiercecracker1 wrote:is there anything specail required to run a turbo, internally? i.e. hell fire rings, performance HG, hardened valve train? and what about pulling a turbo out of a junkyard off of say a f350 or a cummins?
i know those turbos would probably be a little on the big side, but its just a thought.
I dont mind not having boost at lower rpm, thats what the stroker part is for, the turbo (if i can afford to install one) will be for helping out at higher rpm. i.e. highway, towing, or really turning the meats offroad.
Oh, and another thing would it be eaiser to
water or air cool a trubo??
A ford or cummins turbo would be great. Cummins being a internally gated holset, usually a Hy35, or Hx35. Perfect size for us!
The ford is slightly bigger and externally gated..forget who makes their factory turbos atm.
Remember your stroker is a bigger motor, thus more air, fuel & exhaust. Thus they can spin a bigger turbo faster! No issue with those at all, and honestly its better to go slightly bigger vs slightly smaller! PTB = part throttle boost..I can tune for anything 50% and up on the throttle. So anything under 50% is going to be untuneable for me with a SAFC II, meaning I cant add fuel! In turn the PTB is forcing in more air without more fuel = kaboom! Plus PTB for DD
can suck! Killing fuel mileage, super snappy feeling, not always the best, but depends on what you want..
Think of your normal operation range..IE highway speed RPM. Mines around 2350RPM. So I sized my turbo to
start spooling around 2200rpm. As in it starts building boost around 2200-2300..leads to very minimal PTB, you get usually better mileage, because instead of using more throttle, the turbo will just spool a little, and your moving like you need to! And because it spools right where your running, you just put your foot in it and off you go:)
Special considerations...I've heard alot of people say metric rings vs standard size because they are thinner, giving less heat transfer...but again your not shooting for 1000whp lol. I'd focus on getting a good strong piston that'll take some detenation, forged is best, but a good cast/hyper will work as well! The KB2229 I'll be running can be dished from 11cc to around 30cc..meaning its got some meat to it, thus making it slightly stronger and more resistant to detonation because its got alot of material to take the force..If you have a piston thats 11cc dish, and can only be dished to 16cc, theres not much meat! But a piston thats 11cc that can be dished to 30cc has more material to work with, the ticker piston will take more of a beating!
Obviously theres more to it, but think about stuff like that when choosing parts!
I plan to stay around 6-8psi, no need for more..Most turbo stock 4.0s with 6-8psi are pushing 200-210whp and around 250whp. A stroked turbo 4.0 should be close to 275whp and 325whp. May be getting to the limit of the stock rods... My 4.2L, stock cam, 2.00/1.55 valves, ported Renix head, around 9:1 compression and 6-8psi, intercooler and 30lbs injectors, tuned on 91oct. May need even bigger injectors lol. I'm honestly expecting around 240hp and around 290ftlbs. I may make more, may make less...it remains to be seen.
You don't water & air cool a turbo..you oil and water cool a turbo..most oil cooled turbos are perfectly fine though! Your talking about a water-air intercooler that cools the intake charge. YES you need to cool the intake charge somehow! Our jeeps have a issue with high intake charges..so cool it anyway you can. A air-air would be the best! Water-air will get heat soaked no matter what on a daily driver..not a bad setup, but air-air is easier and effective! High intake charge temps leads to loss of power, less mileage and increased chance of detonation.
I'm going to be running meth injection while I'm N/a and turboed. It cools the intake charge considerably, and fights of detonation. Their WILL be gains with meth injection and our jeeps, even without turbos..it'll fight off detonation and cool the intake charge! It also steam cleans your motor, so no carbon build up ever!
Special rings may help slightly, such as the hell fire rings. I've heard of them, but I'll be using normal moly rings. Our headgasket will hold around 12-13psi. 505 offers a metal headgasket thats been tested to 20psi I guess. Its .041 compressed. I would get the 505 metal intake/exhaust gasket no matter what though..I've burned up a few of the normal kind on my stock jeep...so the metal one there should lead to better durability.
IF you haven't bought your valves or anything yet, then I'd look into some bigger valves IF your truely to turbo your motor! In N/a motors, you want the most air through the smallest hole..IE get more flow with stock sized valves! With forced induction bigger valves help, because your now forcing air in..so you can move more, thus the bigger valves being more effective.
I chose stock LS1 stuff. Kept stock 87-95 cam for cost effectiveness..2.00/1.55 valves. Polish the combustion chambers..helps N/a & FI. Also polished exhaust ports glass smooth, it'll keep exhaust velocity up on both N/a & FI motors.
I've done/am doing all the above on my motor. It will run N/a for 6months before the turbo touches it, all the stuff I've done should help out in theory.
.038 super tight quench
9.1:1 compression
A-A intercooler
2.00/1.55 valves
Polished exhaust ported & combustion chambers