Why is it when you run a turbo kit you have to gut the supercharger? If this a "must" or do people just do it?
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Why is it when you run a turbo kit you have to gut the supercharger? If this a "must" or do people just do it?
tuning it is a mess
Its not a must to gut the S/C however you will make more power on a turbo alone than you will twincharged.
And drunkiethebear have you actually tuned a twincharged engine or are you just spouting off something you read someone else say even though they weren't twincharged?
The guys who have a twincharged setup say its not as bad as people make it out to be.
I have heard that the twincharge is a great setup was just wondering why people don't seem to do it more. I think the rumor of the difficulty is far worse than the actual process itself.
@darkhorizon: My charger pully was broke for a while and the 3.8 spec engine without a supercharger is a lot slower so to say the supercharger only helps you a little is not at all accurate. The 3.8 without the S/C makes more power than the 3.8 with the S/C but not using it. Don t forget they reduce the compression on these engines so to compare a GP GT to a GTP without a S/C isnt a very good way to do it.
I see twincharging as a waste as the blower becomes more of a restriction. If more can be accomplished with 1 power adder then why inefficiently run two? I see it more as a shock value to show off at car shows etc. Power can still be made by twincharging and some have have yielded successful results. But let's not fool ourselves... The M90 is a terrible design and takes more horsepower percentage wise than a turbo does to create that power.
FWIW before I went turbo I dynod my GTP with a M90 blockoff.
142hp/172tq
And yes there was a huge difference between running S/C and running a gutted case. And I hated every minute of it. LOL
Last edited by txslow6; 07-24-2011 at 08:47 PM.
i believe he ment that the SC doesnt add enough power when you are turbocharged.
The "twincharged" setup is fine in theory... the blower "turns off" when the turbo equals out the pressure above and below the rotors... All "proper" twincharged setups use a bypass valve that ensures that pressure stays balanced above and below the blower.
The blower turns into a fancy looking blender after your turbo starts making the boost... Does it increase volumetric efficency at this point? Probably, but is it worth the 10-15 horsepower to spin the blender... I would say no.
Having owned, built, and driven just about every setup out there... The fact that a turbo has some lag gives your tires some small chance of not melting off at 80mph.... Having a bit more power earlier is probably going to make you slower in most situations.
Apples and oranges here... N/A without any sort of intake manifold design is going to destroy wide open power... not to mention the motor has to spin the SC rotors with vacuum..... When you are putting 17psi from a turbo into a twincharged setup, or a regular turbo setup... the "non twin charged" will always make more power to the ground.without a supercharger is a lot slower so
I know its already been said but the supercharger will actually restrict the turbo. the SC would only help in the lower rpms untill the turbo spooled to a certain psi...
That is completely false. The SC increases VE due to the fact that the blower is a displacement blower, not a compressor.I know its already been said but the supercharger will actually restrict the turbo.
Didn't ZZP Twincharge before they Twin Turbo'd the TTGT? Then I believe they went back to a single turbo setup...
Its positive displacement... The blower doesnt move a specific mass of air, it moves volume (displacement). Turbo's operate on mass airflow, and displacement blowers work on the amount of space the air takes up. This is why a positive displacement blower only has one metric that determines efficency, and that is pressure ratio above and below the rotors... which is irrelivant to atmospheric numbers if you are putting 2bar worth of air into the top, and 2.5 bar is cooming out the bottom... you have a ratio of .5.
Now in reality, no twin setup even uses the blower under boost... so that arguement is even more pointless.
Uh... you would run a smaller pulley if this was true... but it isnt even close to true.Which is why people run larger pulleys on TC setups, bruh.
What your saying goes in line with a few things ive heard about people doing twin setups so the supercharger is giving power when the turbo lags, and the turbo is giving power when the SC cant. Since these power adders work in total different ways to me it would make sence that to have both... you would never see any "lag"
Our base turbo kit will take a naturally aspirated 3800 from 200 to 300 HP+ non-intercooled and to 400HP+ intercooled. Adding our kit to a supercharged 3800 will net 400-700HP depending on your configuration.
off of zzperformance.com
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