Mr Peepers
DSM Wiseman
- 1,272
- 28
- Oct 16, 2005
-
Janesville,
Wisconsin
I've been kicking this idea around for a little while now. I've seen people block off one side of a twin scroll turbine for spool up, and then go one step farther a put a butterfly valve on one side; opening at a certain boost level or rpm. None of these retain the benefits of the divided housing such as keeping the exhaust pulses from cross contaminating each other, and the exhaust slams into a closed plate when you're trying to spool the turbo.
The basic idea is that you have all the exhaust go through one side of the divided turbine(stock Holset turbine housing etc), in effect cutting the a/r in half, and generating much more velocity to get the turbo up to speed. Once you reach a certain boost level, the plates will become vertical, and flow just as any twin scroll setup would. The plates would be controlled by something like a wastegate actuator and the cracking pressure would be controlled by a MBC. The plates would move at a 1:1 ratio in respect to each other with rod connecting them, similar to a locomotive wheel or primaries/secondaries on a carb.
With this setup, there is decent flow when you have one side blocked off for spool, and very little obstruction at full boost/high rpm when you want all the top end you can get. The best part would be keeping the exhaust divided when it's fully open, something I haven't seen for this type of idea.
What I'm worried about is the temperature of the plates. They will be directly in the flow of the exhaust without much to dissipate the heat, and molten metal/chips etc aren't good for turbine wheels. SS 321?
Any input?
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The basic idea is that you have all the exhaust go through one side of the divided turbine(stock Holset turbine housing etc), in effect cutting the a/r in half, and generating much more velocity to get the turbo up to speed. Once you reach a certain boost level, the plates will become vertical, and flow just as any twin scroll setup would. The plates would be controlled by something like a wastegate actuator and the cracking pressure would be controlled by a MBC. The plates would move at a 1:1 ratio in respect to each other with rod connecting them, similar to a locomotive wheel or primaries/secondaries on a carb.
With this setup, there is decent flow when you have one side blocked off for spool, and very little obstruction at full boost/high rpm when you want all the top end you can get. The best part would be keeping the exhaust divided when it's fully open, something I haven't seen for this type of idea.
What I'm worried about is the temperature of the plates. They will be directly in the flow of the exhaust without much to dissipate the heat, and molten metal/chips etc aren't good for turbine wheels. SS 321?
Any input?
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If I were, it would be for an HX-35 or similar.

