
Have already got steel head gasket, and a stage 3 hybrid fensport turbo
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gazrev1tubby wrote:What you need to bear in mind, is that a hybrid turbo will push more cfm than a stock one will, so in essence, if you run higher boost, you need to ensure that your fuelling can cope with the volume of air being delivered.![]()
I know some folk will disagree, but it's generally known that rev 1/2 injectors are safe for 1.1 bar of boost, and rev 3+ injectors will support 1.3 bar- on stock turbo units.
Also, at these levels, you're outside of the stock ecus maps, so would need a piggy back or standalone to to correct the fuel maps.
![]()
On stock management, rev 1/2 1 bar, and rev3+ 1.2 bar is generally considered safe.Now the difference that 0.2 bar makes in the the real world, is probably circa 25 bhp.
![]()
Having spent hours and hours, and a lot of money over the years on mine, playing with standalones and also doing a rev3 conversion on mine, my advice would be that it's a lot of money to spend- for a relatively small gain.
![]()
Just my 2p, but if you were building a monster high power weapon, then changing management would obviously be necessary.For an everyday road car on a limited budget, I wouldn't bother
gazrev1tubby wrote:Exactly right bob, but when you say high octane, are you referring to anything higher than 99ron, which is the highest available from the pumps?
dylan5084 wrote:How much you payin per litre of 110, I take it its not readily available?
Al-sw20 wrote:![]()
I pay$3 a litre for 110 LL off the pump.
Thats
£1.50 a litre btw.
bobhatton wrote:gazrev1tubby wrote:What you need to bear in mind, is that a hybrid turbo will push more cfm than a stock one will, so in essence, if you run higher boost, you need to ensure that your fuelling can cope with the volume of air being delivered.![]()
I know some folk will disagree, but it's generally known that rev 1/2 injectors are safe for 1.1 bar of boost, and rev 3+ injectors will support 1.3 bar- on stock turbo units.
Also, at these levels, you're outside of the stock ecus maps, so would need a piggy back or standalone to to correct the fuel maps.
![]()
On stock management, rev 1/2 1 bar, and rev3+ 1.2 bar is generally considered safe.Now the difference that 0.2 bar makes in the the real world, is probably circa 25 bhp.
![]()
Having spent hours and hours, and a lot of money over the years on mine, playing with standalones and also doing a rev3 conversion on mine, my advice would be that it's a lot of money to spend- for a relatively small gain.
![]()
Just my 2p, but if you were building a monster high power weapon, then changing management would obviously be necessary.For an everyday road car on a limited budget, I wouldn't bother
On high octane fuel I have been for the last two years running 1.5 bar boost on a stock Rev 2 engine and ECU with a CT20B giving 300 HP at the flywheel.
My son is running a T3/4 turbo and 274 deg cams with a stock Rev 3 ECU at 350 HP.
No need to add or change the ECU untill you need bigger injectors.
The thing that keep the engines together is the high octane fuel
Noz_13 wrote:bobhatton wrote:gazrev1tubby wrote:What you need to bear in mind, is that a hybrid turbo will push more cfm than a stock one will, so in essence, if you run higher boost, you need to ensure that your fuelling can cope with the volume of air being delivered.![]()
I know some folk will disagree, but it's generally known that rev 1/2 injectors are safe for 1.1 bar of boost, and rev 3+ injectors will support 1.3 bar- on stock turbo units.
Also, at these levels, you're outside of the stock ecus maps, so would need a piggy back or standalone to to correct the fuel maps.
![]()
On stock management, rev 1/2 1 bar, and rev3+ 1.2 bar is generally considered safe.Now the difference that 0.2 bar makes in the the real world, is probably circa 25 bhp.
![]()
Having spent hours and hours, and a lot of money over the years on mine, playing with standalones and also doing a rev3 conversion on mine, my advice would be that it's a lot of money to spend- for a relatively small gain.
![]()
Just my 2p, but if you were building a monster high power weapon, then changing management would obviously be necessary.For an everyday road car on a limited budget, I wouldn't bother
On high octane fuel I have been for the last two years running 1.5 bar boost on a stock Rev 2 engine and ECU with a CT20B giving 300 HP at the flywheel.
My son is running a T3/4 turbo and 274 deg cams with a stock Rev 3 ECU at 350 HP.
No need to add or change the ECU untill you need bigger injectors.
The thing that keep the engines together is the high octane fuel
The thing that keeps the engines together is lack of knock![]()
Instead of running high octane fuel, you can go the route of aftermarket ECU, and control the timing.Knock control is achievable via high octane fuel and fixed OEM timing stipulated by the last column on the timing map, or lower octane fuel and user-defined timing on an extended timing map.
The end result is the same.
Super_red wrote:
Is pre ignition not caused by the compression in the cylinder?I was under the impression that if the fuel ignites under compression this would cause knock and the only ways to reduce this are to lower static CR or increase the fuels resistance to combust.
![]()
I cant see how ignition timing can stop pre ignition?
Super_red wrote:I thought that the blast front from the pre ignition hitting the blast front from the spark was what caused knock?And the resulting hot spot is what damages pistons?
Turbonoz wrote:Pre-ignition is the most destructive& dangerous combustive event to occur in an engine.
Pre-ignition
: The mixture is ignited prior to the timed spark event.
Causes are simply hot spots within the combustion chamber.
Typically caused by thin-wire precious metal plugs
(plat.
![]()
& iridium) designed to run hot in order to burn off all deposits which do not dissipate heat anywhere near as well as copper plugs.
This is why I only run copper plugs in any engine I'm working with.
Platinum plugs are for 60k service intervals in new engines running factory power.
Carbon deposits themselves can ignite the mixture as well.
Pre-ignition
is caused by physical
'issues' within the combustion chamber and is
silent
.
The resultant damage
(melted piston) is due the huge amount of heat
& pressure from attempting to compress an explosion, rather than the explosion forcing the piston downwards to be converted into mechanical work.
Detonation
: The spontaneous cumbustion of the remaining mixture after the timed spark event has initiated the burn process.
The crackling noise you hear is due to the mechanical reaction of the surrounding materials to the severe, instantaneous increase in pressure when the two opposing flame fronts meet.
Think of hitting a tuning fork and the resultant frequency-related sound, in a combustion chamber it occurs at
~6.4kHz.
Knock sensors are simply piezo-electric sensors comprised of crystals designed to output a voltage when subjected to a shock of the correct frequency
(typically 5.3-6.4khz range).
Detonation
is caused by high temperatures
& pressures, too low an octane
(resistance to ignition), incorrect timing
(too advanced) or not enough fuel.
It is characterised by what is referred to as
"pinging",
"pinking",
"knock",
"det" etc.
I would describe the sound like an empty crisp packet being scrumpled up by hand for a turbocharged vehicle on boost, and more like a pan of marbles in an NA vehicle
(quite often caused by a faulty cam/crank sensor).
The resultant mechanical damage is due to the sharp pressure increases which
"shock" the piston, characterised by cracked ringlands, and pitting on the cylinder head and around the top of the cylinder bores.
'Knock hysteresis
' is also worth mentioning here.
Due to the
'snowball' effect of detonation causing more heat which in turn promotes detonation more readily, it takes a more retarded timing value
& richer mixture
(cooling effect) to halt detonation than it does to prevent it in the first place.
rs007 wrote:Turbonoz wrote:Pre-ignition is the most destructive& dangerous combustive event to occur in an engine.
Pre-ignition
: The mixture is ignited prior to the timed spark event.
Causes are simply hot spots within the combustion chamber.
Typically caused by thin-wire precious metal plugs
(plat.
![]()
& iridium) designed to run hot in order to burn off all deposits which do not dissipate heat anywhere near as well as copper plugs.
This is why I only run copper plugs in any engine I'm working with.
Platinum plugs are for 60k service intervals in new engines running factory power.
Carbon deposits themselves can ignite the mixture as well.
Pre-ignition
is caused by physical
'issues' within the combustion chamber and is
silent
.
The resultant damage
(melted piston) is due the huge amount of heat
& pressure from attempting to compress an explosion, rather than the explosion forcing the piston downwards to be converted into mechanical work.
Detonation
: The spontaneous cumbustion of the remaining mixture after the timed spark event has initiated the burn process.
The crackling noise you hear is due to the mechanical reaction of the surrounding materials to the severe, instantaneous increase in pressure when the two opposing flame fronts meet.
Think of hitting a tuning fork and the resultant frequency-related sound, in a combustion chamber it occurs at
~6.4kHz.
Knock sensors are simply piezo-electric sensors comprised of crystals designed to output a voltage when subjected to a shock of the correct frequency
(typically 5.3-6.4khz range).
Detonation
is caused by high temperatures
& pressures, too low ane
(resistance to ignition), incorrect timing
(too advanced) or not enough fuel.
It is characterised by what is referred to as
"pinging",
"pinking",
"knock",
"det" etc.
I would describe the sound like an empty crisp packet being scrumpled up by hand for a turbocharged vehicle on boost, and more like a pan of marbles in an NA vehicle
(quite often caused by a faulty cam/crank sensor).
The resultant mechanical damage is due to the sharp pressure increases which
"shock" the piston, characterised by cracked ringlands, and pitting on the cylinder head and around the top of the cylinder bores.
'Knock hysteresis
' is also worth mentioning here.
Due to the
'snowball' effect of detonation causing more heat which in turn promotes detonation more readily, it takes a more retarded timing value
& richer mixture
(cooling effect) to halt detonation than it does to prevent it in the first place.
Good post![]()
To Dylan- you should get yourself a copy of Jeff Hartmans
"how to tun and modify engine management systems"
Change from£20 delivered from Amazon and the like, and its even better than I thought
- open minded no limits thinking, and case studies
(in multiple vehicles) to prove the theory out in many different practical settings.
Whole section devoted to rev2 MR2 turbo![]()
Very educational read, and IMO worthwhile purchase for any avid tinkerer
Turbonoz wrote:bobhatton wrote:gazrev1tubby wrote:What you need to bear in mind, is that a hybrid turbo will push more cfm than a stock one will, so in essence, if you run higher boost, you need to ensure that your fuelling can cope with the volume of air being delivered.![]()
I know some folk will disagree, but it's generally known that rev 1/2 injectors are safe for 1.1 bar of boost, and rev 3+ injectors will support 1.3 bar- on stock turbo units.
Also, at these levels, you're outside of the stock ecus maps, so would need a piggy back or standalone to to correct the fuel maps.
![]()
On stock management, rev 1/2 1 bar, and rev3+ 1.2 bar is generally considered safe.Now the difference that 0.2 bar makes in the the real world, is probably circa 25 bhp.
![]()
Having spent hours and hours, and a lot of money over the years on mine, playing with standalones and also doing a rev3 conversion on mine, my advice would be that it's a lot of money to spend- for a relatively small gain.
![]()
Just my 2p, but if you were building a monster high power weapon, then changing management would obviously be necessary.For an everyday road car on a limited budget, I wouldn't bother
On high octane fuel I have been for the last two years running 1.5 bar boost on a stock Rev 2 engine and ECU with a CT20B giving 300 HP at the flywheel.
My son is running a T3/4 turbo and 274 deg cams with a stock Rev 3 ECU at 350 HP.
No need to add or change the ECU untill you need bigger injectors.
The thing that keep the engines together is the high octane fuel
The thing that keeps the engines together is lack of knock![]()
Instead of running high octane fuel, you can go the route of aftermarket ECU, and control the timing.Knock control is achievable via high octane fuel and fixed OEM timing stipulated by the last column on the timing map, or lower octane fuel and user-defined timing on an extended timing map.
The end result is the same.