78Brougham
"Chump"
How's your alternator....
you guys are some real dicks
I gave you the blueprint of doing it correctlyand everyone that said wheres the blow off valve, wheres the intercooler - yall dont ******* know what you are talking about
CORRECTION: This style of turbo does not work!this style of turbo DOES NOT use those items
Thank you.Blow through carb is easiest way unless you have a thing for electron flow.
Unless you have the umteenmillion parameters sorted and turbo sized just right for narrow rpm band you need a waste gate. Blow off valve is the evil twin to this, needed for dumping pressure when throttle blades are closed (no throttle blades is why diesels were made for turbos).
Suck through turbos have the problem right in the name, "suck"
You will need forged pistons and piston thermal coatings would not hurt because your combustion temps are going to be sky high with all the on the ragged edge of detonation with wet/sucky turbo.
Any carb can be blow through with little modifications. Think about it, your carb is fighting off 5-7 psi of atmospheric pressure all the while it's idling, 10-14 psi when letting off at high RPM in gear. So you still think that 10-12 psi trying to get out is a problem? That's only at full song when RPM and load are right, the rest of the time it's much less. Spring and jetting adjustments being the worst of sorting out, and big leaks (choke linkage, gotta go)
Power piston springs will need to be lighter and jetting will need to be fatter,( more air needs right amount of more fuel, gasoline's fatal flaw). Everything needs referenced back to same pressure as float bowl vents(air horn area) is going to see. Nothing can be left to vent to atmosphere, you are making atmosphere so you have to stay with it.
A gasoline engine without a charge air cooler (" intercooler" though technically not correct) is a lesson in.... Well you would be better off beating your head on a rock prior to doing that instead of after.
Cam is also very important the valve timing events need to be for turbo application to work efficiently.
Hope this helps. Others will have 2-3 cents to offer but it is anal worry wart stuff. Sort the big problems the details will line up to be knocked out one by one.
One other point to mention is that first picture with the Quadrajet, those carbs don't have enough fuel in them for a NA small block there is no way that thing is keeping up with a turbo Big Block
Thank you, again.Yes
I gave you the blueprint of doing it correctly
CORRECTION: This style of turbo does not work!
The first picture is a GM unit. The carburetor is mechanically connected to the waste gate. A manual overide to dump all exhaust gas past the turbo upon closing the throttle to prevent overpressuring the carburetor. This causes the turbine wheel to lose all of its momentum/speed, compounding the "turbo lag" that is much worse in a gasoline engine than a diesel, because of exhaust flow gets cut every time the throttle does, causing the turbo to slow too much and recovery (turbo lag) takes forever.
NO FREE LUNCH!
you guys are some real dicks.
you guys are some real dicks.
and everyone that said wheres the blow off valve, wheres the intercooler - yall dont ******* know what you are talking about.
this style of turbo DOES NOT use those items.
you should just *not* post, instead of showing your ***.
Hey Dave, correct me if I’m wrong but aren’t these the kind where you floor it and it kicks in two blocks later? This is the system that made “turbo lag” a household word right??? Just wondering because I remember anything turbo short of an ‘87 regal type T was dog&#%& slow. Those turbo trans ams were a joke. If you had to guess what % HP gain could you really expect - on the street - not a race car with a system like this?
Or as I had noted "don't work"Those early systems were a dog. Punch the throttle and it seemed it took forever for the turbo to spin up. As the turbo spun up, these cars would usually knock and fart until the fuel and air ratios stabilized. If I recall correctly, the early turbos when everything was perfect would be expected to gain about 25% over a similar non turbo engine. (boost ratios in those days were low) In practice, these early turbos were not very refined and tended to run rich at low rpms, lean at high rpms an fried the valve train. Most of the engines also suffered a significantly shorter life that similar non turbo versions.
Dave
could supplement all this with a "c3" system and a feedback quadrajet.Or as I had noted "don't work"
Only thing a Q jet does well is steady state atomization. Any solid fuel demand on them results in low float bowls and lean conditions.could supplement all this with a "c3" system and a feedback quadrajet.
was being facetious, actually. was going to suggest "lean burn" but thought the better of "c3".Can you fix them sure. Why is the question.
My buddy’s dad and his two uncles bought one type T each back in I want to say ‘87. I had an article in a mag by the Mopar action guys called Hi Perf Cars I think. Now his dad had a silver turbo TA and it was caprice classic slow so he was leery of my news. Long story short he test drove one and just never took it back. His two brothers each bought one and they were pretty fast.Those early systems were a dog. Punch the throttle and it seemed it took forever for the turbo to spin up. As the turbo spun up, these cars would usually knock and fart until the fuel and air ratios stabilized. If I recall correctly, the early turbos when everything was perfect would be expected to gain about 25% over a similar non turbo engine. (boost ratios in those days were low) In practice, these early turbos were not very refined and tended to run rich at low rpms, lean at high rpms and fried the valve train. Most of the engines also suffered a significantly shorter life that similar non turbo versions.
Dave
My buddy’s dad and his two uncles bought one type T each back in I want to say ‘87. I had an article in a mag by the Mopar action guys called Hi Perf Cars I think. Now his dad had a silver turbo TA and it was caprice classic slow so he was leery of my news. Long story short he test drove one and just never took it back. His two brothers each bought one and they were pretty fast.
Now these were super fast if you powerbraked them into the boost band? I’m no turbo guy so not sure what you’d call it but that red velvet POS would give my 340 cuda a run for its money but would lose unrecoverably from the hole. This was earth shattering speed for a new car in the 80’s. With that being said how would we slap on that type and make it work? I believe it was intercooled but I’m no Buick guy either.
And yes they still have it in all it’s bald spotted velour seat dangling headliner and rattling failed turbo glory. Turbo gave up the ghost about 80k and they parked it. Forever Lol!!!
and my alternator is fine you corinthian leather baby
No, yes you can put it in a box like Studebaker did. Most float bowl vents are in the air horn so fuel does not go splashing out onto hot exhaust ( stays in air cleaner). So you put a hat on the carb and blow in Venturi will still cause a pressure drop causing fuel to be drawn over through main jets."Blow THRU" needs a pressurized enclosure AROUND the carb, as one of the Shelby GT350 supercharged cars did. Otherwise, when you put pressurized air through the carb, it can force fuel OUT of the carb via the bowl vent, etc. Not good. Which is why "PULL THRU the carb" is a better deal for carbureted engines
I was wondering what the hell you were talking about. Thanks.was being facetious, actually. was going to suggest "lean burn" but thought the better of "c3".