Om617a max safe boost on 30 year old head gasket
Om617a max safe boost on 30 year old head gasket
i am currently running around 16-17 peak on a maxed stock pump. 15-16 is enough for all the fuel the stock pump can deliver. however if you get a new pump i would try to stay below 25 lbs. i have heard that 2 bar is the redline for bending rods. however that was with the fuel to match the 2bar of boost. the HG is not the weak point on these engines its the rods and cracking the head from the heat.
Was talking with a guy recently who says he has 396hp with 2.2bar.
Agree with the above, 2 bar is a never-can-go-wrong level. People have run 2 bar with NA engines with the weaker rods so up to you.
Boost doesn't kill an engine, heat does. Better to have fuel burning properly with high boost than smoking at low. That's my theory anyway
(09-10-2016, 12:32 AM)R-3350 ...HG is not the weak point on these engines its the rods and cracking the head from the heat.
(09-10-2016, 12:32 AM)R-3350 ...HG is not the weak point on these engines its the rods and cracking the head from the heat.
Thank you all for the replies. I am currently running a dieselmeken M pump with a Holset Hx30w turbo and small intercooler. My wastegate starts to open at about 20psi and is fully open by 22psi. Sounds like I can boost to 25-28psi no problem. If I stay on the fuel hard and long it smokes and the EGT's start to raise pretty quick. Do the egt's go up because of the unburned fuel or the 21psi of boost?
Diesels are the opposite of petrol jobs - high EGT is caused by excess fuel to air ratios, so either back your fuel down or bring your boost up a touch or a combination of both.
How's your HX30 going for you? I have one but not road legal yet so barely driven it.
(09-15-2016, 10:39 PM)NZScott Diesels are the opposite of petrol jobs - high EGT is caused by excess fuel to air ratios, so either back your fuel down or bring your boost up a touch or a combination of both.
How's your HX30 going for you? I have one but not road legal yet so barely driven it.
(09-15-2016, 10:39 PM)NZScott Diesels are the opposite of petrol jobs - high EGT is caused by excess fuel to air ratios, so either back your fuel down or bring your boost up a touch or a combination of both.
How's your HX30 going for you? I have one but not road legal yet so barely driven it.
(09-15-2016, 10:01 PM)Evenglass ... Do the egt's go up because of the unburned fuel or the 21psi of boost?
(09-15-2016, 10:01 PM)Evenglass ... Do the egt's go up because of the unburned fuel or the 21psi of boost?
The EGTs go up due to late combustion of the last bits of fuel when the oxygen is mostly depleted, as well as the fact that maximum flame temperature comes when you've combusted all of the oxygen and thus combusted the maximum fraction of the charge air. When you add boost pressure to reduce EGT without being at the smoke limit, what you're doing is adding more inert gas (nitrogen) and uncombusted oxygen to serve as thermodynamic working fluid (fluid that gets heated and expanded to extract mechanical energy from the heat). With more mass of working fluid inside the cylinder but the same amount of combustion energy, there's a lower temperature increase.
By the nature of things, unburned fuel doesn't contribute to increased temperature as such, but a late combustion of fuel that doesn't immediately find oxygen to attach to when injected but manages to react with oxygen later in the cycle does contribute to higher exhaust temperature without increasing peak combustion temperature and without contributing to making power (it needs to burn while the piston is near TDC and heat the air before expansion starts to make power)
The real danger when overfuelling a diesel is pre ignition. Normally a diesel doesn't experience pre ignition as there is in normal operation no fuel present in the cylinder until the injector opens, but a diesel that's being grossly overfuelled with a massive amount of black smoke pouring out is leaving unburned fuel inside the cylinders after the exhaust stroke. When enough of that fuel builds up it can start to ignite before the injection happens and you've got a melted piston on your hands.
(09-17-2016, 04:47 AM)baldur .... With more mass of working fluid inside the cylinder but the same amount of combustion energy, there's a lower temperature increase.
(09-17-2016, 04:47 AM)baldur .... With more mass of working fluid inside the cylinder but the same amount of combustion energy, there's a lower temperature increase.
(09-17-2016, 01:13 AM)kestreltomIt's a buibuilt chevy 700r4, holding up fine. Temps stay about 200F after the torque converter.(09-15-2016, 10:01 PM)Evenglass ... Do the egt's go up because of the unburned fuel or the 21psi of boost?
it's the unburned fuel. You can run more boost, but will the piston rings hold it? Keep an eye on your crankcase vent pressure. It wouldn't hurt to run a 50/50 water/meth injector into the intake after the intercooler... or a bigger intercooler... or both
How is your transmission holding up to the full throttle runs?
(09-17-2016, 01:13 AM)kestreltomIt's a buibuilt chevy 700r4, holding up fine. Temps stay about 200F after the torque converter.(09-15-2016, 10:01 PM)Evenglass ... Do the egt's go up because of the unburned fuel or the 21psi of boost?
it's the unburned fuel. You can run more boost, but will the piston rings hold it? Keep an eye on your crankcase vent pressure. It wouldn't hurt to run a 50/50 water/meth injector into the intake after the intercooler... or a bigger intercooler... or both
How is your transmission holding up to the full throttle runs?
(09-16-2016, 09:50 PM)Evenglass The HX30W is fantastic! Lowered egt's by 100*f alone. It boosts as fast as the stock Garrett mybe faster, the boost riserises extremely quickly. One of the best sounding turbos out there and industrial rated.
(09-17-2016, 01:13 AM)kestreltom(09-15-2016, 10:01 PM)Evenglass ... Do the egt's go up because of the unburned fuel or the 21psi of boost?
it's the unburned fuel. You can run more boost, but will the piston rings hold it?
(09-16-2016, 09:50 PM)Evenglass The HX30W is fantastic! Lowered egt's by 100*f alone. It boosts as fast as the stock Garrett mybe faster, the boost riserises extremely quickly. One of the best sounding turbos out there and industrial rated.
(09-17-2016, 01:13 AM)kestreltom(09-15-2016, 10:01 PM)Evenglass ... Do the egt's go up because of the unburned fuel or the 21psi of boost?
it's the unburned fuel. You can run more boost, but will the piston rings hold it?
(09-17-2016, 04:47 AM)baldur The EGTs go up due to late combustion of the last bits of fuel when the oxygen is mostly depleted, as well as the fact that maximum flame temperature comes when you've combusted all of the oxygen and thus combusted the maximum fraction of the charge air. When you add boost pressure to reduce EGT without being at the smoke limit, what you're doing is adding more inert gas (nitrogen) and uncombusted oxygen to serve as ...........Good info. So can timing adjustment help with this also?
(09-17-2016, 04:47 AM)baldur The EGTs go up due to late combustion of the last bits of fuel when the oxygen is mostly depleted, as well as the fact that maximum flame temperature comes when you've combusted all of the oxygen and thus combusted the maximum fraction of the charge air. When you add boost pressure to reduce EGT without being at the smoke limit, what you're doing is adding more inert gas (nitrogen) and uncombusted oxygen to serve as ...........Good info. So can timing adjustment help with this also?
(09-17-2016, 05:15 PM)Evenglass(09-17-2016, 04:47 AM)baldur The EGTs go up due to late combustion of the last bits of fuel when the oxygen is mostly depleted, as well as the fact that maximum flame temperature comes when you've combusted all of the oxygen and thus combusted the maximum fraction of the charge air. When you add boost pressure to reduce EGT without being at the smoke limit, what you're doing is adding more inert gas (nitrogen) and uncombusted oxygen to serve as ...........Good info. So can timing adjustment help with this also?
(09-17-2016, 05:15 PM)Evenglass(09-17-2016, 04:47 AM)baldur The EGTs go up due to late combustion of the last bits of fuel when the oxygen is mostly depleted, as well as the fact that maximum flame temperature comes when you've combusted all of the oxygen and thus combusted the maximum fraction of the charge air. When you add boost pressure to reduce EGT without being at the smoke limit, what you're doing is adding more inert gas (nitrogen) and uncombusted oxygen to serve as ...........Good info. So can timing adjustment help with this also?