turboglenn
15+ Year Contributor
- 6,375
- 123
- Nov 5, 2007
-
RIpley,
West Virginia
Here's some pics of the turbo housing i put the flange on and then polsihed up a bit by removing and smoothing the tabs on the housing
ALso, this is the down pipe i made that i had to cut the flange with the plasma and made an internal gate dump to the atmosphere. The only thing i'm not too proud of is the MIG welds, they are a little large and after TIG'ing for so long now, to me MIG welds just aren't pretty anymore
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I will say one thing about getting to work on this vehicle. This car is amazing! For a 1.8 liter mx-3 with hardly anything done to it except a megasquirt and gutting what wasn't needed from teh engine bay.
Before the custom DP the turbo would only spike 17 then drop to 12psi by redline (and that was all it could do no matter the boost control setting), now it will instantly hit the 17, and hold it all the way through redline and the logs show that it's still moving air and could use more boost and more fuel, but the fuel system is about maxed out so we're holding off on any further tuning as of yet. THe car is running a megasquirt and after convincing him to go e85 and reprogramming the fuel and spark tables to use it, the customer and myself are just amazed at how much more power this car picked up. It's making so much more power compared to most of these cars that it already smoked the "new clutch" which was what i can only describe as the equivelant to the ACT2100 for our cars and is basically the "standard" upgrade that no one has to replace and we smoked it within a week of bringing the pwoer levels up from e85, porting and this DP. He's putting in the new clutch this weekend and we are going back to tuning...
It was amazing how much difference was made by this custom down pipe compared to the OEM o2 housing which was damn near a square box shape that i'm surprised there's not more of them commercially available already.. So much more in fact that on his forum people are now in line to have me build 4 more of them and got 3 more flanges alone to make and ship. So now i have to get his DP off and build a jig so i can replicate them off the car for these people... The only other DP you can get for these cars is 258 bucks plus shipping and they won't sell the flange seperate.
I'm offering up the flange or complete down pipes for these people since the market is so slim on offerings, I"m just trying to figure out on the flages how the customer can weld their own DP and not warp the flange even though it's 1/2 inch steel plate. And since i machine them flat after welding or jig them up to where they can't warp, the best thing i've come up with is to add a shortpiece of pipe, say an inch or so long at each outlet so they can start welding their pipes to that instead of direct to the flange to keep them from getting too much heat from a MIG directly into the actual turbo flange and ruining it's sealing surface.
anyway, here's pics let me know what you think...the pic of the flange before it was cut is in the thread titles "Cool stuff (now with pics)
Also, I have to state before hand that the tube used for the wastegate dump was already cut and welded in about 9 places when he brought it instead of having me buy new stuff he thought we could just make the stuff he had work and we did.. Also, the piece of bent pipe that has "TG" welded onto it in MIG is a scrap of leftover from a year ago that we ended up needing at the last minute and found in my scrap container ... saved us a trip to the store and a few bucks even if it doesn't perfectly match up
ALso, this is the down pipe i made that i had to cut the flange with the plasma and made an internal gate dump to the atmosphere. The only thing i'm not too proud of is the MIG welds, they are a little large and after TIG'ing for so long now, to me MIG welds just aren't pretty anymore
.I will say one thing about getting to work on this vehicle. This car is amazing! For a 1.8 liter mx-3 with hardly anything done to it except a megasquirt and gutting what wasn't needed from teh engine bay.
Before the custom DP the turbo would only spike 17 then drop to 12psi by redline (and that was all it could do no matter the boost control setting), now it will instantly hit the 17, and hold it all the way through redline and the logs show that it's still moving air and could use more boost and more fuel, but the fuel system is about maxed out so we're holding off on any further tuning as of yet. THe car is running a megasquirt and after convincing him to go e85 and reprogramming the fuel and spark tables to use it, the customer and myself are just amazed at how much more power this car picked up. It's making so much more power compared to most of these cars that it already smoked the "new clutch" which was what i can only describe as the equivelant to the ACT2100 for our cars and is basically the "standard" upgrade that no one has to replace and we smoked it within a week of bringing the pwoer levels up from e85, porting and this DP. He's putting in the new clutch this weekend and we are going back to tuning...
It was amazing how much difference was made by this custom down pipe compared to the OEM o2 housing which was damn near a square box shape that i'm surprised there's not more of them commercially available already.. So much more in fact that on his forum people are now in line to have me build 4 more of them and got 3 more flanges alone to make and ship. So now i have to get his DP off and build a jig so i can replicate them off the car for these people... The only other DP you can get for these cars is 258 bucks plus shipping and they won't sell the flange seperate.
I'm offering up the flange or complete down pipes for these people since the market is so slim on offerings, I"m just trying to figure out on the flages how the customer can weld their own DP and not warp the flange even though it's 1/2 inch steel plate. And since i machine them flat after welding or jig them up to where they can't warp, the best thing i've come up with is to add a shortpiece of pipe, say an inch or so long at each outlet so they can start welding their pipes to that instead of direct to the flange to keep them from getting too much heat from a MIG directly into the actual turbo flange and ruining it's sealing surface.
anyway, here's pics let me know what you think...the pic of the flange before it was cut is in the thread titles "Cool stuff (now with pics)
Also, I have to state before hand that the tube used for the wastegate dump was already cut and welded in about 9 places when he brought it instead of having me buy new stuff he thought we could just make the stuff he had work and we did.. Also, the piece of bent pipe that has "TG" welded onto it in MIG is a scrap of leftover from a year ago that we ended up needing at the last minute and found in my scrap container ... saved us a trip to the store and a few bucks even if it doesn't perfectly match up
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I don't think i'll have any issues with the price or selling them, but i know the market is very limited. I mean how many early model OEM turbo MX-3's do you see running around these days, let alone in goos shape and modified. But all this means is that my jig will be made with wood instead of steel and aluminum pieces so it will be good enough to make at least 20-30 and cost me only about 8 - 10 dollars to build instead of a good 50-75+ if i were to make it from heavy plate and all metal supports.
and that make me happy to see) Well, all the new found power has been a strain on the "stage 1 clutch" (that's the only way he knows to describe it from ordering it) And this last week at only 15psi it went up in smoke! He pulled the engine out of the car this morning after spending all night at americruise in lincoln, NE and brought it to me tonight after i had dinner and we did the final sealing of the turbo's outlet area to divide wastegate from turbine