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Remote mount turbo?
Has anyone ever done a remote mount turbo setup on an FC?
Maybe a twin turbo setup with split exits.... |
A remote mount turbo on our Cars would not be effective. A majority of the ability for the turbo to spool does not come from gas velocity but rather the pressure differential (which is more based upon heat than anything else). The closer to the engine where the exhaust temperature is greatest the quicker the ability to produce boost. So instead of having nice hot gases that are then exposed to a much cooler volume you'll have relatively cool exhaust gases hitting cool air. The pressure differential is not big enough to produce a spool that would allow a good set up like that.
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It's not effective on -any- car... the closer you can put the turbo to the valve/port the better; the exhaust gas will expand out from the chamber, and the shorter the pipe, the less chance the pressure has to drop (as it equalizes with the pressure in the manifold) before it hits the turbine wheel; the difference in pressure between the manifold and the downpipe at this point is what spools the turbo.
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It has been done on a RX8. Search for member Rotorocks on RX8Club. He made one himself for his car. He presently is using a mid-mounted turbo that is next to the rear of the trans. He has reported success with both setups.
Squire Turbo Systems is in the process of making a kit for the RX8. They are testing a single and dual turbo setup. I don't see how a dual setup will work for the 8 but we will wait and see. |
A guy with a Chevy Beretta 2.8 made a remote mount and saw a dyno proven 68hp increase.
Saying they are not effective is a false statement. They run around 6psi tops, and with a rotary putting out as much exhaust force as they do, seems like it would be more than capable of boosting to 6psi and giving NA guys a little more umph. But the car would be loud as hell |
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The effectiveness of a remote mount turbo sucks. There's no way around it. You will see more gains, and better performance all around the closer you put it to the manifold. Just because I said it wasn't effective does not mean it wouldn't work. It's just not very good at what it does. Quote:
Bottom line is this: Will it work? Yes. Is it worth the time and money and head ache for it? No. |
Not everyone is looking to get maximum power out of their cars. I think that the 600 bucks you could make a setup like that is worth 68hp. Look at the costs of doing a TII swap now a days.
Think of 1200 for and engine and tranny, then 1200 for a rebuild not counting the hard parts it might need, possibly a new clutch, drive shaft, rear end. Honestly that is not a very cost effective mod if you look at it. Just to get rolling you are looking at well over 2k. You could say "take the cheaper way out and keep your NA tranny" But then it would turn into a flame war with people saying to take the weak NA tranny out and do a full TII sawp. It's proven that it works, it is definitely effective. So from now on I would like the thread to be directed in the way I wanted it. I would to know if anyone has actually done this? Not if someone knows its a shitty setup |
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The question is really why are you so hell bent on doing a remote mount? |
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IMO - it'll work. It'll work well. But it has its purpose, which is to fit a turbo or turbos where you normally can't (ever seen a C5 or C6 engine bay?) and on our cars there's plenty of real estate to fit a turbo. That said though i'm all for uniqueness...with a proerply sized turbine and housing you'll have a decent setup. Plumbing, shielding, etc will take alot of thinking but it can be done. |
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Why are you so hell bent in putting down a setup you probably have never used? And honestly, I have not seen a TII longblock with tranny for 300-400 bucks. If you do manage to find one for that price, it will more than likely need at the least a housing and rotor. They do seem to be very effective, although you seem to think not. Many people have run them with great results. |
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The problem with a remote mount on an FC is space. Have you been under the car to see where you could put one? It would have to be all the way in the back (in one of the muffler spaces). Now that the turbo is back there, you have to plumb intake piping all the way back to the front, most likely occupying the same space that the HOT exhaust is already filling. Doesn't seem like something I would want to attempt when a 6 port turbo is so easy to do. |
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The C5 around here running this setup puts out a little over 580whp at 6psi. Up from its previous 390-410 in with various exhaust setups (engine also had other mods). Now, if you were to put a traditional set of turbos in the engine bay, maybe it would make 600-610 at 6psi? Hard to say, but the difference is very negliable make no mistake about it. Its not like running a turbo in the rear automatically means its 50% less efficent. Either setup would be VERY comparable when you omit the install/fab headaches of doing a rear mount turbo. Shit, Randy even has EMP on his setup and 6psi of MAP there's only 6.75psi EMP which is an extremely close ratio (edit: yes clsoe ratio for "low" boost, but nonetheless.) |
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As I said, I have never seen a TII longblock for 400 bucks. But look at it this way. Everyone used to say there was no way of getting power out of an NA FC. Everyone said it was impossible to turbo one without it blowing up within a few hundred miles. But people still tried it and did it successfully. Maybe the remote mount is the same way? |
Success is relative though. THe person who goes turbo 6 port may be satisfied with the money put into the mod. They might be satisfied with the power and reliability. They might be satisfied with their uniqueness.
In the end their satisfaction/ "success" may not be what I consider successful. I'd rather spend the money on a TII swap and modify it from there (for less money /same performance.) perhaps the remote mount turbo is like that. Best way is to do it and show us the results. |
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Link Unfortunately you need to sign up to see that. For what it's worth here are some excerpts from it: Quote:
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Specifically for a 13B we have a higher rate of exhaust gases being pumped into the system, however we are not at all that big on displacement so our exhaust volume would not equal out to the V8 or the V6's hell we're smaller than most I4's. Where we are able to support larger turbos comes from the Temperature differential (which then equates to the pressure differential since the physical volume of the gases is limited to the pipe) and unburnt hydrocarbons. Any questions? Don't make me look up Engineering papers on this stuff. |
I'm not looking to argue, the questions been answered.
Like I said, I wasn't saying as if it were going to more effective than a front mounted turbo, just saying it would be an effective way to boost an NA engine. Not an effective way to get a rotary power house built around an NA engine. I'll probably just set one up on my Isuzu, but I wanted to see if anyone had done it. Vex you really like arguing haha. I would actually probably try a mid mount, but even a mid mount is considered a remote mount. I was thinking having it placed about where the Pipes split into the Y pipe, with a small intercooler, and a small pump to pump the oil. And a small turbo. Maybe like a small Mitsubishi Starion turbo. I have one of those laying around along with a BOV and a manual boost controller, boost gauge and AFR. I do know that on a Miata it produced very good results with a small intercooler. |
too bad Vex and I don't disagree on almost anything, I'm sure we'd have epic arguments.
I just want someone to do it and show results. |
One other thing to consider is how long will it take to pressurize that amount of intake plumbing, and what effect will that extremely long intake tract have on off-boost performance (a very valid question, given that everything about the remote mount setup increases the spool time).
The short answer: Shitty low down torque numbers until the turbo starts to spool, and even then, the boost will come on slowly, as it now has a fairly huge space to pressurize; and it has to re-pressurize it every time you let off and allow the BOV to vent the pressure to the atmosphere... Which raises another question: What kind of monster BOV would you need to vent that volume of pressure -without- allowing it to back-spin the turbine? Probably you would want one very near the turbo outlet, and another post-intercooler. |
Most people have a loss of power at the low end, but as soon as it spools, It boosts back up rather quickly. Or so the videos and people who have them say.
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Yeah it aint!
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