you have everything labled wrong...
Here's what I would do. 1. Block the fitting at the red circle with a pipe plug.2. I think you have the right idea by running the wastegate off the manifold (using the block-off plate as a convenient source of pressure). This draws pressure from the manifold, where it's slightly lower, instead of right off the turbo where the pressure is high, meaning the wastegate will stay closed longer. You can splice the boost controller in line from there. This is where I'm running mine from, the manifold, because I want after-intercooler boost not pre-intercooler boost to be measured.3. Use the stock (purple) fitting for the LDA and your boost gauge. The LDA doesn't take much pressure to operate and from what I understand, the way it operates isn't linear... You basically get fuel metering "with boost" and "without boost." Increasing pressure to the LDA won't necessarily increase fueling, from what I understand. 4. Green circles- connect of cap. From what I understand about the T3 is that this side of the wastegate solenoid draws vacuum, which keeps the wastegate from opening under high-vacuum conditions. This probably isn't a huge factor on a diesel. Anyway, I think the guy above me misunderstands what you're attempting to do, which is to modify how the wastegate is operated (to stop it from opening as much, therefore increasing boost) by drawing boost from a different source where the pressure is lower. I've done this on Volvos too. You aren't trying to connect things as they are on a stock engine.
Quote from: bajacalal on April 14, 2012, 06:28:27 pmThe LDA doesn't take much pressure to operate and from what I understand, the way it operates isn't linear... You basically get fuel metering "with boost" and "without boost." Increasing pressure to the LDA won't necessarily increase fueling, from what I understand. That's not right at all unless you are specifically talking about the joke pump that that AAZ was given. Any pump with a real boost pin and spring, the max fuel is changed linearly with boost pressure.
The LDA doesn't take much pressure to operate and from what I understand, the way it operates isn't linear... You basically get fuel metering "with boost" and "without boost." Increasing pressure to the LDA won't necessarily increase fueling, from what I understand.
I would want the boost connection for the LDA connected to the manifold and not the turbo. The manifold more closely matches the air actually entering the engine which is what I want to fuel based on.
Im a little confused here, what does ****** mean
...BTW your Bieber avatar is awesome.-Malone
The idea i had to feed the LDA straight off the turbo was to "activate" it sooner. Would that work? pressure at the turbo would be more instant when it spools. Or is it redundent being that as soon as the turbo spools pressure in the intake also increases?I think what would happen is you would get more fuel than your engine could deal with, at least for a fraction of a second resulting in nothing more than a puff of extra smoke, if anything. Personally, I don't like my car to make a lot of smoke. That extra port in the WG was hooked up to fresh air via a small hole in the turbo air intake. So if it draws vacuum should it be capped off or open to atmosphere.I don't know why you don't just leave it hooked up. I think it's purpose is to prevent the wastegate from opening under certain circumstances. If you don't want it, I would definitely cap the hole in your turbo intake side so it won't suck unfiltered air. Then, go to the garden/small equipment section of your hardware store and get one of those tiny, universal, inline fuel filters. Take a piece of hose, mount the fuel filter away from the turbo and run a piece of hose to that port, connecting it to one side of that fuel filter. This will serve to keep dust and crap out of that port, while leaving it open to atmospheric pressure.
That's not right at all unless you are specifically talking about the joke pump that that AAZ was given. Any pump with a real boost pin and spring, the max fuel is changed linearly with boost pressure.