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| Custom Fabrication: TIG/MIG welding, jig-building, metal working, fiberglass, carbon fiber, and other custom fabrication projects. |
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05-24-2009, 05:45 PM
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#91 (permalink)
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Proven Member

From: Hemet/San Ja, California
Registered: Dec 2008
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Holly guacamole! This is the sickest set up I have ever seen. Don't get it wrong, but I am thinking on copying your set up for my ride. Hope you don't mind.
Last edited by Defiant; 05-27-2009 at 08:23 PM.
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05-24-2009, 05:53 PM
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#92 (permalink)
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Proven Member

From: sioux city, Iowa
Registered: Apr 2008
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i cant wait to see how this turns out. im a big fan of twin charging you see it alot in the diesel world but not so much in the gas engines which is kind of a bummer. also with what you have all ready said you will be using for fueling and your knowledge ive gathered so far i really think you know what your doing and have a good grasp on what needs to be done. cant wait for more updates
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05-24-2009, 06:03 PM
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#93 (permalink)
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DSM Wiseman

From: Bloxom, Virginia
Registered: Jul 2004
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It's a fVcking joke that there's even anyone even debating that this won't work. It's not like the slow bumbly exhaust of our diesel counter parts arn't doing this already. Any one who wants to debate combustion chamber pressure and knock, should relax and enjoy the fumes.
____________________________
Matt
dd '90 GST, Holset H1C
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05-24-2009, 06:24 PM
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#94 (permalink)
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Proven Member

Car: 1990 Dodge Colt
From: Nowhere, Wisconsin
Registered: May 2005
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Insane to say the least. 1600cc's right? lol
____________________________
1990 Colt
4g63T
Ostrich/TunerPro EMS
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05-24-2009, 06:36 PM
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#95 (permalink)
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DSMtuners Supporting Vendor
Force Engineering

From: Kalamazoo, Michigan
Registered: Oct 2006
Reputation: 
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Ya please stop saying this wont work... The hardest part is going to be tuning but isnt that always the hardest part when trying to reach 600 hp... Im waiting to see pics paul. Did you make it to the company meet?
____________________________
John Whalen(Wheeler LOL)-Force Engineering
In house Dyno/Machine shop
2012 Shootout DSE class winner
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05-25-2009, 12:28 AM
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#97 (permalink)
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Proven Member

From: Panama City, Florida
Registered: Sep 2002
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Probably because not everyone has heard of it. Lol. I for one haven't heard of the compound setup until, well, this thread. Learn something new everyday I guess. Really hope it works out well for ya. I for one though want bolt-on parts cause the fab stuff can be a pain in the ass or trying to replace something that broke. Want everything as easy as I can get these days. Don't wanna spend 10 years trying to figure out the best tune for my ride. But hoping it won't be difficult for ya and hoping to see good numbers. I'd like to see vids of this thing running though.
I think it's funny though that you're talking about noise levels yet you're running the side exit exhaust. Lol. That's what I wanna do though but with a muffler on it. You doing anything for the rear bumper? Looking into the best ideas of not having the naked gaping hole in the back for where the exhaust is suppose to be. Anyway, good luck on this thing.
Last edited by Defiant; 05-27-2009 at 08:24 PM.
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05-25-2009, 12:33 AM
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#98 (permalink)
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Proven Member

From: Blanchard, Oklahoma
Registered: Apr 2009
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that isnt for the exhaust its for the external o2 dump
____________________________
Kolby
95 GSX
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05-25-2009, 05:55 AM
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#100 (permalink)
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Proven Member

From: Demorest, Georgia
Registered: Feb 2003
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If people would go to a book store and look, theres actually a few good books on turbo charging...I did this a few months back, and I learned a few new things. For one, how to actually read a compressor map  .
Again OP, I am kinda surprised no one has tried this yet, I am very interested in how well it works out for ya. If you have the funds it would be very interesting to log air temps at a few different points. Like ambient air temp at the intake, one in the charge pipe going from the big turbos compressor to the small ones, and one on the outlet of the small turbo, and then the TB. Also I think the idea of a water to air IC system might be something to consider if you have the room for it and $, time etc. At any rate good luck with this, keep us updated!
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05-25-2009, 08:21 AM
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#101 (permalink)
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Moderator

From: Coloma, Michigan
Registered: Apr 2003
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Quote:
Originally Posted by v8s_are_slow
Probably because not everyone has heard of it. Lol. I for one haven't heard of the compound setup until, well, this thread. Learn something new everyday I guess. Really hope it works out well for ya. I for one though want bolt-on parts cause the fab stuff can be a pain in the ass or trying to replace something that broke. Want everything as easy as I can get these days. Don't wanna spend 10 years trying to figure out the best tune for my ride. But hoping it won't be difficult for ya and hoping to see good numbers. I'd like to see vids of this thing running though.
I think it's funny though that you're talking about noise levels yet you're running the side exit exhaust. Lol. That's what I wanna do though but with a muffler on it. You doing anything for the rear bumper? Looking into the best ideas of not having the naked gaping hole in the back for where the exhaust is suppose to be. Anyway, good luck on this thing.
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Tuning the car shouldn't be too bad. As long as the wastegates keep their respective turbos in check, tuning will be a breeze. Simply put, it's only more air and more fuel - sooner.
I have a Race Ready electric cut-out for that side exit exhaust. Both wastegates recirculate, so it's definitely not for them. I figure that if I ever want to be loud, I can be at the push of a button. Otherwise, I can drive relatively quietly also having a full exhaust.
Quote:
Originally Posted by dsmfa9nutter
Insane to say the least. 1600cc's right? lol
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1200's for now. But I wouldn't be surprised if I ended up with a set of 1600's very soon.
Quote:
Originally Posted by RipperXX
I think it is amazing that no one has tried this yet
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Me too! It will begin to get much more popular with the aftermarket performance guys in the years to come. It's already growing popularity with the OE group. The new Ford 6.4L hosts a compound turbo set-up and IIRC, Benz is introducing a compound turbo'd 4-cyl diesel car pretty soon.
Quote:
Originally Posted by viperlp01
Did you make it to the company meet?
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I was there, but my car wasn't. There was just too much to get done and not enough time. Ohh well; at least it will be done in about a week anyway.
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05-25-2009, 05:21 PM
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#102 (permalink)
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Proven Member

Car: evolution 1
From: tampa, Florida
Registered: Nov 2004
Reputation: 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by 94awdcoupe
I think this setup fails in design. the first turbo is simply in the way of making power. The compressor side is fine. Its the exhaust side that will not work like you hope. The 16g will overspin and die very quickly, the second turbo will not recieve enough exhaust energy through that small wastegate Compound turbo setups work well on diesels where they should stay. Diesels tolerate very high boost pressures because the engine itself runs off autoignition point of fuel/air charge.
The AMS design staged twin turbo was brilliant by design compared to this setup. They only had a few days to get car ready for event . they feared they wouldnt have enough time to work out bugs so they had to abandon the project.
I cant find pictures of that but a quick search found this new 1.9tdi with staged chargers
Fiat Powertrain: 1.9 JTD Twin Stage Turbo with 100 hp/liter
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I will respond to my own observation as I have done a bit of research on the subject.
My first sentence stands. There are only two paths for the exhaust heat to reach the second turbo. Through the 7cm/5h wheel and through the 44mm wastegate. The wastegate hole itself is going to flow very poorly as gases do not make 90 degree turns well. You are in attempting to make 600hp through those two small openings. The result will be the small turbo getting too much ex heat and the large turbo not getting enough.
Here are some pictures of how important the design of setup is. This is the supra setup that boost logic sells.
www.neons.org • View topic - Compound Turbo Setup? Crazy power... lots of low-end Torque
My comment this should stay with diesels should be discarded. It was uneducated one.
The AMS kit was a staged turbo kit. while brilliant in design is not in same category as compound turbo. Not sure which route I would take if I were to twin turbo. The jury is still out on that.
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05-25-2009, 05:44 PM
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#103 (permalink)
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Proven Member

From: Demorest, Georgia
Registered: Feb 2003
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I wonder how it would effect the setup to put a larger exhaust housing on the 16g and a little smaller one on the T-61?
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05-26-2009, 05:50 AM
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#104 (permalink)
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DSM Wiseman

From: Bloxom, Virginia
Registered: Jul 2004
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A td05h 7cm^2 16g and a 1.75" pipe bypassing it is plenty of flow to the t4 turbine of the 60-1. Assuming backpressure in the 40-50psi range a 1.75" pipe flows PLENTY of mass for the the second turbine to extact plenty of work. 94awdcoupe, I know you already know the equation per our PMs. But for everyone else: Turbine work = Specific heat X Massflow X (temp in - temp out). A derivative of the Euler Turbomachinery Equation that applies to automotive turbochargers.
Those wastegates pictured in that neon forum link are chosen because of the volume of the 6cylinder supra motor and the much higher horsepower potential for which the system is intended. Paul is running a 60-1 compressor wheel. Not a t61.
____________________________
Matt
dd '90 GST, Holset H1C
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05-26-2009, 08:35 AM
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#105 (permalink)
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Proven Member

Car: evolution 1
From: tampa, Florida
Registered: Nov 2004
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I am basing my observation on real world experience. All his exhaust is going through 5h wheel/7cm housing and 44mm hole off two runners. I built a 25g setup that was exhausting through huge 6h wheel/ 8cm housing and my wastegate was fed through same 44mm hole as this setup. What I thought was a great design proved to have marginal flow through wastegate.
Heat is what powers a turbine. If he wants to make 550whp he has to move 55lb per minute of air through the 60-1. The exhaust heat required to power that second turbine is what is in question here.
I hope that this setup works. I think its awesome idea. And I praise the efforts of anyone who takes the time to bring new ideas in to play.
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05-26-2009, 08:42 AM
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#106 (permalink)
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Moderator

From: Coloma, Michigan
Registered: Apr 2003
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That BoostLogic kit is dead sexy, but I'm not able to fit that size package in the engine bay of my 2G. I specifically choose some of my components due to price and overall size and compactness. If it proves to work well, a more appropriate manifold and turbo set-up may be in order.
I'll have some more pictures and updates at the end of this week.
Here's a shot of both compressors on the car:
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05-26-2009, 08:59 AM
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#107 (permalink)
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Moderator

From: Coloma, Michigan
Registered: Apr 2003
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Quote:
Originally Posted by 94awdcoupe
I am basing my observation on real world experience. All his exhaust is going through 5h wheel/7cm housing and 44mm hole off two runners. I built a 25g setup that was exhausting through huge 6h wheel/ 8cm housing and my wastegate was fed through same 44mm hole as this setup. What I thought was a great design proved to have marginal flow through wastegate.
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What was the issue with the set-up on the left of your picture? What problems were you having with it?
Quote:
Originally Posted by 94awdcoupe
Heat is what powers a turbine. If he wants to make 550whp he has to move 55lb per minute of air through the 60-1. The exhaust heat required to power that second turbine is what is in question here.
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That's incorrect. It's a common misconception that the larger turbo needs to flow the total output of the entire system, or that the larger turbo needs to be gated to match the output pressure that you want to see. Both are incorrect. The 60-1 only needs to flow what I have it set to (just under one atmospheric bar) and will be gated so. The smaller turbo is doing most of the work in a compound set-up, and it receives the engine's exhaust heat quickly and efficiently, so I don't forsee any issues with it.
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05-26-2009, 09:34 AM
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#108 (permalink)
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Proven Member

Car: evolution 1
From: tampa, Florida
Registered: Nov 2004
Reputation: 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by 99gst_racer
What was the issue with the set-up on the left of your picture? What problems were you having with it?
That's incorrect. It's a common misconception that the larger turbo needs to flow the total output of the entire system, or that the larger turbo needs to be gated to match the output pressure that you want to see. Both are incorrect. The 60-1 only needs to flow what I have it set to (just under one atmospheric bar) and will be gated so. The smaller turbo is doing most of the work in a compound set-up, and it receives the engine's exhaust heat quickly and efficiently, so I don't forsee any issues with it.
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The issue I was having was wastegate did not flow enough. Had boost crept from 25-29psi. had a heck of a time fixing problem by porting waste tube entrance once welded on.
I dont understand how the second turbo at 1 bar will flow 55lb per minute? If you want to make 550whp that is the amount of air you will need..All the air enters system through big turbo. From what you are saying the first turbo at 1bar will move 30lbs and the second will multiply the weight to 55lbs?
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05-26-2009, 09:37 AM
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#109 (permalink)
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Moderator

From: Coloma, Michigan
Registered: Apr 2003
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Quote:
Originally Posted by wishihadatalon
I still say that if it works like it should, Paul is going to be picking up a whole lot of drivetrain parts off of the nice long straight road by his house 
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I sure hope not! I'd like to think that my clutch will be a nice fuse that won't allow for complete drivetrain destruction. We'll soon find out.
That reminds me - I still need to get those DSS rear axles in too.
Quote:
Originally Posted by 94awdcoupe
The issue I was having was wastegate did not flow enough. Had boost crept from 25-29psi. had a heck of a time fixing problem by porting waste tube entrance once welded on.
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Sounds like something wasn't working right. I don't think it was a design flaw.
Years ago, I had a ported 2G manifold and I had the #1 runner flanged for a 38mm wastegate. I could run 14 psi on a 50-trim with no creep issues at all. Pic of my manifold
Quote:
Originally Posted by 94awdcoupe
I dont understand how the second turbo at 1 bar will flow 55lb per minute? If you want to make 550whp that is the amount of air you will need..All the air enters system through big turbo. From what you are saying the first turbo at 1bar will move 30lbs and the second will magically multiply the weight to 55lbs?
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The second turbo (60-1) won't be flowing that kind of airflow. Like I said, the smaller turbo (B16G) is the primary turbo in a compound set-up. It does the majority of the work. With the increased inlet pressure, it's goal will be to flow that kind of airflow.
Last edited by Defiant; 05-27-2009 at 08:29 PM.
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05-26-2009, 10:36 AM
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#110 (permalink)
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Proven Member

Car: evolution 1
From: tampa, Florida
Registered: Nov 2004
Reputation: 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by 99gst_racer
Sounds like something wasn't working right. I don't think it was a design flaw.
Years ago, I had a ported 2G manifold and I had the #1 runner flanged for a 38mm wastegate. I could run 14 psi on a 50-trim with no creep issues at all. Pic of my manifold
The second turbo (60-1) won't be flowing that kind of airflow. Like I said, the smaller turbo (B16G) is the primary turbo in a compound set-up. It does the majority of the work. With the increased inlet pressure, it's goal will be to flow that kind of airflow.
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The port location is very important and it was a design flaw. gasses flow like water at high velocity. Gasses flow out the no.1 runner port very well. Try picturing this. Take a water hose on full blast and shoot into the number one runner. you will see alot of water coming out that wastegate hole. Now try shooting the water through the manifold with the hole in the spot you have it at. not much water will come out. Most will just pass by because water has mass and the majority will be following the wall from centrifugal force. Your 44mm gate has a lot bigger job than just controlling boost of first turbo. The first turbo will be moving way more air than it can normally by itself. The wastegate capacity is 200% of what it normally would be at.
If the smaller turbo is doing the majority of the work and moving 55lbs air then that 55lbs of air has to come from inlet on big turbo. you can have 55lbs of air inside ten cubic foot box, and you can have 55lbs of air inside a one cubic foot box. thats what turbos do. they compress air into smaller boxes. The big turbo definitely has to flow the air needed to make the desired HP level.
The correct answer is the box in front of big turbo (air inlet form first turbo) is at lower than atmospheric pressure. It therefore does not have to work as hard to move 55 pounds of air.
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05-26-2009, 10:41 AM
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#111 (permalink)
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DSM Wiseman

From: Bloxom, Virginia
Registered: Jul 2004
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It's good to see this project coming to completion. So many questions. . .
____________________________
Matt
dd '90 GST, Holset H1C
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05-26-2009, 01:33 PM
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#112 (permalink)
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Moderator

From: Coloma, Michigan
Registered: Apr 2003
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Quote:
Originally Posted by 94awdcoupe
The port location is very important and it was a design flaw. gasses flow like water at high velocity. Gasses flow out the no.1 runner port very well. Try picturing this. Take a water hose on full blast and shoot into the number one runner. you will see alot of water coming out that wastegate hole. Now try shooting the water through the manifold with the hole in the spot you have it at. not much water will come out. Most will just pass by because water has mass and the majority will be following the wall from centrifugal force.
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Pressurized liquid/gas will take the path of least resistance. In the case of my set-up, the wastegate poses lesser resistance than the turbine section of the turbo. Nevertheless, that doesn't explain why you feel your turbo set-up didn't work well when gated off of the #1 runner and mine was just fine.
Quote:
Originally Posted by 94awdcoupe
If the smaller turbo is doing the majority of the work and moving 55lbs air then that 55lbs of air has to come from inlet on big turbo.
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So, you're saying that the only way to get 55 lbs/min of of the smaller turbo is by forcing 55 lbs/min into it? Don't you see that that doesn't make any sense? Knowing that pressure ratios multiply, one should be able to imagine that is a pressure charge is entering a compressor, a higher pressure charge will exit.
Quote:
Originally Posted by 94awdcoupe
you can have 55lbs of air inside ten cubic foot box, and you can have 55lbs of air inside a one cubic foot box. thats what turbos do. they compress air into smaller boxes.
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It's called "volume".
Quote:
Originally Posted by 94awdcoupe
The big turbo definitely has to flow the air needed to make the desired HP level. The correct answer is the box in front of big turbo (air inlet form first turbo) is at lower than atmospheric pressure. It therefore does not have to work as hard to move 55 pounds of air.
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I have a really good feeling that you don't have a 100% grasp on how a compound set-up works. Keep studying up on it.
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05-26-2009, 01:59 PM
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#113 (permalink)
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DSM Wiseman

From: Bloxom, Virginia
Registered: Jul 2004
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Hey Paul, when this is up and working, will you be logging MAP? Are you going to be able or willing to log boost at the different stages?
____________________________
Matt
dd '90 GST, Holset H1C
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05-26-2009, 02:52 PM
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#114 (permalink)
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Moderator

From: Coloma, Michigan
Registered: Apr 2003
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I do plan to log MAP - I still need to buy the sensor though. (thanks for the reminder  )
I have two boost gauges in the car already. One for pre-stage and the other for manifold pressure. I hadn't considered datalogging pre-stage boost before though. I would need an additional MAP sensor for that, so I probably won't do it due to the cost of MAP sensors.
Last edited by Defiant; 05-27-2009 at 08:30 PM.
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05-26-2009, 03:07 PM
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#115 (permalink)
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Proven Member

From: Corvallis, Oregon
Registered: Jun 2006
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Ok, I think people are getting confused here.
Mass can not be created or destroyed. What goes in, must come out. If you are flowing 55 lb/min of air into the engine, you are flowing 55 lb through BOTH turbos, regardless of anything else. The volume can change (and it will), but the number of molecules can not.
94awdcoupe, first off, the air is going through the big turbo first in his setup. Secondly, the air inlet to the first turbo might be slightly lower than atmospheric due to pressure drops in the piping, but it will be multiplied by the first turbo's pressure ratio. Then the second turbo will multiply the outlet pressure of the first turbo by its pressure ratio. So your final pressure is P = P(in)*PR1*PR2, neglecting pressure losses in the pipes.
The other thing that I am curious about is efficiency. The way I see it, if both turbos are running at 70%, your overall efficiency is 49%, which is pretty poor. You are going to be flowing some awfully hot air.
Last edited by SpeedAddict62; 05-26-2009 at 03:50 PM.
Reason: math fail
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05-26-2009, 03:45 PM
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#116 (permalink)
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Moderator

From: Coloma, Michigan
Registered: Apr 2003
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Quote:
Originally Posted by SpeedAddict62
The other thing that I am curious about is efficiency. The way I see it, if both turbos are running at 70%, your overall efficiency is 48%, which is pretty poor. You are going to be flowing some awfully hot air.
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How did you calculate overall efficiency?
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05-26-2009, 03:54 PM
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#118 (permalink)
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Proven Member

Car: evolution 1
From: tampa, Florida
Registered: Nov 2004
Reputation: 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by 99gst_racer
Pressurized liquid/gas will take the path of least resistance. In the case of my set-up, the wastegate poses lesser resistance than the turbine section of the turbo. Nevertheless, that doesn't explain why you feel your turbo set-up didn't work well when gated off of the #1 runner and mine was just fine.
So, you're saying that the only way to get 55 lbs/min of of the smaller turbo is by forcing 55 lbs/min into it? Don't you see that that doesn't make any sense? Knowing that pressure ratios multiply, one should be able to imagine that is a pressure charge is entering a compressor, a higher pressure charge will exit.
It's called "volume".
I have a really good feeling that you don't have a 100% grasp on how a compound set-up works. Keep studying up on it.
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My 25g setup had same tube mounted between two runners as you do. You saw the picture posted. The path of least resistance was not through the wastegate. thats why there was creep. It was easier for the gasses to go to the turbine and over spool it.
You are missing that you need ~55 pounds of air to make your 550whp goal. Yes that 55 lbs goes through both turbos. If anyone has a misunderstanding on this point it is you Paul. I politely asked in my first post how the big turbo can run at 1 bar and pass 55pounds of air. You didnt answer correctly. and still havent. so I can only infer that you dont have a complete understanding about how basic turbo charging works.
volume is a poor term to use with turbo charging. volume is temperature and pressure defendant. You need to use the term lbs of air. lbs/min describes volume independently of pressure and temperature. this statement is correct. If the smaller turbo is doing the majority of the work and moving 55lbs air then that 55lbs of air has to come from inlet on big turbo.
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05-26-2009, 05:06 PM
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#119 (permalink)
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Proven Member

From: Blanchard, Oklahoma
Registered: Apr 2009
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Wow... seriously it doesnt matter how many numbers you throw at paul Im going to laugh my ass off IF this thing works. Paul has mad skills and I think the rest of you need to keep your negative comments to yourselves.
I believe we as a community our here to help each other out and give each other inspiration. I dont recall ONE TIME during this post Paul simply asking "do you think this will work?" so stop saying IMO because he probably doesnt care.
Im sure if this keeps up he wont be willing to share projects like this with the rest of us who actually ENJOY reading these and live for this kinda shit!
I remember when people were saying the 4g63 was weak and would never run 9's now its running 7.70s and 6.90s in drag cars
Paul I admire your fabrication skills  fellow dsmer
Kolby
____________________________
Kolby
95 GSX
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05-26-2009, 05:07 PM
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#120 (permalink)
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Moderator

From: Coloma, Michigan
Registered: Apr 2003
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Quote:
Originally Posted by 94awdcoupe
My 25g setup had same tube mounted between two runners as you do. You saw the picture posted. The path of least resistance was not through the wastegate. thats why there was creep. It was easier for the gasses to go to the turbine and over spool it.
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Well, if your point is that plumbing a wastegate off that part of the manifold is bad, then I'm not worried. I've already sucessfully accomplished that on a previous build. Along with thousands of other DSMers. Like I said, your issue doesn't sound like a design flaw. But we can agree to disagree at this point.
Quote:
Originally Posted by 94awdcoupe
You are missing that you need ~55 pounds of air to make your 550whp goal. Yes that 55 lbs goes through both turbos. If anyone has a misunderstanding on this point it is you Paul.
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No, not missing it at all. The 60-1 compresses atmposheric pressure at pressure ratio higher than 1:1 and forces it into the 16G's compressor which multiply's that pressure ratio by it's own ratio to further compress the air charge to eventually reach the target pressure. The outlet pressure of each compressor is not even close to the same in a compound set-up.
Quote:
Originally Posted by 94awdcoupe
I politely asked in my first post how the big turbo can run at 1 bar and pass 55pounds of air. You didnt answer correctly. and still havent.
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And my point is that if you understand the very concept of how a compound turbocharger system works, you wouldn't be asking a question like this. There's no other way of saying the same thing over and over again that's going to make it more correct.
Quote:
Originally Posted by 94awdcoupe
volume is a poor term to use with turbo charging. volume is temperature and pressure defendant. You need to use the term lbs of air. lbs/min describes volume independently of pressure and temperature.
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 So, volume is the proper term then... lbs/min is a ratio of volume and time. By the way, my goal is to break 60 lbs/min with this set-up. I just don't yet know how much boost I need to get there.
Quote:
Originally Posted by 94awdcoupe
this statement is correct. If the smaller turbo is doing the majority of the work and moving 55lbs air then that 55lbs of air has to come from inlet on big turbo.
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No dude, that is definitely not correct. The smaller turbo isn't "moving" air. It's multiplying it. What in the World make you think that for 55 lbs/min to come out of a turbo that 55 lbs/min has to enter it first? The 16G receives a volume of air and further compresses it to a higher volume. That's the way ANY compressor works. On a single turbo set-up, it pulls in atmospheric air and futher compresses it to create boost (which is only compressed atmosphere). The ONLY difference with a compound setup is that the primary turbo is fed a higher atmosphere via the largr turbo.
Maybe you're a picture person. Unfortunately, this is the best artwork you'll ever get out of me.
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