and will tie the actuator to the gas pedal and do a nice gov mod to give the best results.
from my understanding, the vanes wil be on a direct control from the throttle, and will open all of the way when it is floored all of the way. They will be on a spring loaded actuator arm, and will remain closed for the low end portion of the rev range, and be completely open for the top end....... or perhps I have that backwards, when I see it in action I'll better understand it. I am also well aware of the fact that these engines do not like low end boost, and was under the impression that this would be the best route to go. I must ask, why is the vc no good? Good advice so far, the object here was to get a 1722 hybrid, buy both and squeeze them for the parts to make it, as opposed to spending close to two grand for one. I have a friend that owns a turbo rebuild shop and he can help me with the rebuild/hybridization. will the 1722 be enough to push 40 reliably?so the questions are1. my vc combined with a vnt22 from a 330d will not work, and why?2.is the vc no good and why?3. will the hybrid vnt push 40 pounds reliably? "don't want it to blow up and get sucked into my increasingly expensive engine.4.would have to be, for the money "as in it not being an object" which is the best turbo's available for what I want to achieve, I want to push 40 pounds reliably, and not overdue the low end boost., preferrably I want to go the vnt route. And I have a fully built frankenengine aaz head. I will also be using an pd150 intake, unless there is a better flowing one
from my understanding, the vanes wil be on a direct control from the throttle, and will open all of the way when it is floored all of the way. They will be on a spring loaded actuator arm, and will remain closed for the low end portion of the rev range, and be completely open for the top end.......
Nothing of the sort is needed. Spikes only occur if your system is poorly designed.Having the vanes open all the time is just promoting carbon buildup. Every single OEM application keeps the vanes closed all the time until desired boost is reached.If your vanes ever reach 100% open at any boost/load, your turbine is too small.
carbon buildup causes premature vane failure
the idea of having a "fully functional" vnt is that you don't need to worry about spikes, or BOV's or wastegating at all, am I incorrect?
If you set the vanes to close and stay closed when you mash the pedal you'll get crazy high boost, very high exhaust manifold pressure and your turbo won't last as long as you'd like.
So you gotta come up with a way for the turbo to only make as much boost as you need for the amount of fuel being injected.