Gonna bump this one back up. Closest thing to the topic my question is about. Bear with me my brain is fried from reading about 20 threads before this one lol
So my initial question was drive pressure with VGT vs fixed. From what I’ve read, VGT creates excessive drive pressure because of the instant spool. So in theory, a fixed vane charger of th same mm could keep a stock engine together longer. Correct? But this can of course be negated with tuning for starters or if you really want to get deep a wastegate setup.
Basically my thoughts are this. I love the idea of a big single. But as a DD, I don’t love the idea of a laggy smoky pig up till a certain rpm while laying into it. Marks 72mm VGT is the biggest I’ve seen. I don’t want instant spool from a charger that big. So to wrap this up, could the VGT be tuned to help keep smoke down while spooling by bumping up the boost pressure a bit to burn the fuel more efficiently, while still keeping drive pressures at a reasonable ratio, and performing like a very efficiently setup fixed vane big single?
I hope this makes sense because my head hurts typing it. If not, I’ll take my slap on the wrist and read more.
Mark can you start a diary thread on everything you know about the duramax?
You have definitely forgotten more then a lot of us will properly ever know lol
Back on topic
How would a waste gate affect the turbo braking?
And how much does cylinder pressure increase when using that feature?
Mark you are the freaking man. I was praying you’d be the one to respond. Everything you said makes perfect sense. I know drive pressure is necessary and I’ve read your threads about the 1:2-2:1 ratio is golden. So that’s obviously where the VGT comes in. VGT can produce gobs of torque with a large turbine at lower rpms. This means boom. Switch to big single. Can’t spool as good which means less torque at lower rpms which means stays together. So. I think what I was trying to get out last night was this. Let’s say I have 2 tunes for a VGT. Your 72mm in particular. One tune, can it be tuned to drive closer to stock with less power let’s say around the 450-500 range and keep the engine together because you’re not making ridiculious power and torque at lower rpms. Then tune 2 be tuned to behave like a big single but use the vanes to aid in spooling to keep smoke down. Not instant power, but just not a smoky pig till the charger lights. So basically. Best of both worlds.
Lol, I don't know about all that but I've been at it a very long time. To answer your question, it all comes down to how much fuel you throw at it and when you do it. The Rpm range that you work in also has a huge affect on this too. Most S400 trucks don't make peak torque until 2500+rpm range where a strong single vgt can do this at the 1500-1900rpm range. That's where knowing what the pressure is matters. You really don't have to worry about this til you get up past the 500hp range unless the tuning is just stupid aggressive. Hope this helps.
Both will have no problem destroying a stock motor it ran hard enough! Honestly comes down to tuning and setup. The S472 has the ability to make more peak hp since it has a much larger turbine and flow capacity and will produce more boost pressure when pushed hard. The VGT will drive circles around it on the street for daily driving but the S472 will shine in the 5% of the time that you run it wide open. I honestly don't like to run the 72mm VGT as a single since I designed it for compound applications where guys want a 1200++Hp daily drivable truck. I have guys that do run them as singles but it isn't my preference. I would run an S468 on a stock motor long before I would run the 472. In the end it comes down to what you like personally. I've run S400's on my truck and I always end up back with the vgt cause I hate the lag of big singles but that is just me.