

Sorry, I have no idea of your background

(just as you have no idea about mine) but you didn't counter my theoretical pondering so I interpreted your comment as

"I didn't understand".

(That could still mean I didn't explain myself well, rather than imply a lack of ability on your end) You said the pressure in the exhaust manifold is probably more than the boost pressure.

My point was that, for the CT26, it would have to be at least triple the cracking pressure

(relative to the pressure in the exhaust, not the atmosphere) to make it actually move.

Rob - East Coast Imports wrote:I've seen many EWG conversions, none have ever left the actuator in place.

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Just because everyone does the welding doesn't mean it's actually necessary!

I'd be very interested in either some solid theory to say the pressure is actually high enough to push open the flap or a counter example of someone who's tried it.

There are so many urban myths going round the modified car scene that I often choose to question the

"accepted wisdom" because sometimes it makes no sense what-so-ever.

Rob - East Coast Imports wrote:but if it works for you then, well.

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it's your car.


I've not run this setup on my car.

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I wish I had, as I'd be a few

£100 better off as I'd be able to sell my spare CT20b!
However
I'm in the rare position of being able to
easily try it
, albeit with a Garrett actuator rather than Toyota.

Looking at the diaphragm housing of each, I'd suggest the Garrett unit would crack easier

(smaller diagram

= less force for a given boost pressure

= weaker spring

= lower exhaust pressure required to lift the flap), but either way it's a test we can actually do, rather than just disagreeing on theory

I can easily disconnect the internal gate's vac hose and leave the external gate connected.

What I don't immediately know is how to know if the actuator moved or not.

Some options would be:
1) Mount both a light and a

(cheap) camera in the engine bay
2) Remove the engine cover and mount a GoPro on the rear glass
3) Put a circlip on the actuator arm and fashion some form of guide that will push the circlip back along the arm should the wastegate move

Then we'll have actually have an experimental answer as to whether the internal gate actually does get blown open or not.

I might prove myself wrong, which would be fine.

.

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at least there would be some solid evidence instead of

"that's what everyone else does".
