(Or as an alternate thread title: "One person's 15 psi is not the same as another person's 15 psi...")
I assume that when people talk about the amount of turbo boost pressure they are running, they are usually running a stock restrictive exhaust.
Since an engine is more or less an air pump, if you attempt to ram more air into it (via turbo), part of the "p.s.i." that the turbo is pushing is just overcoming the exhaust restruction. In other words, if you set up your turbo on stock exhaust to pump 15 psi into the engine as shown on your boost gauge, and then afterwards you change to a low restriction exhaust AND CHANGE NOTHING ELSE, your boost gauge will read much lower.
My assumption here (please feel free to correct) is backed up by my own experience with my intercooled AAZ engine, with 2.5" mandrel bent exhaust. I noticed in Smog's DIY, he says when you crank the lock nuts on the wastegate rod out to the extreme end, you should be pumping up about 15 psi, and sometimes his car sees 20. Well, I have my lock nuts so far out on the threaded part of the rod that I'm worried they might rattle off with vibration, several threads further out than what Smog's photo shows, but still I can only get 10 psi of boost (from the stock tiny KKK turbo mounted on the AAZ). I assume this is because with the low exhaust restriction, there simply is not enough exhaust backpressure to produce 15 psi of positive boost, even with the wastegate adjusted to maximum rod length.
So my question is, am I stressing the engine components as much at 10 psi with low back-pressure exhaust as someone else with stock exhaust and 15 psi? That is, does 10 psi on my engine = 15 psi stress on a stock-exhausted engine?
When Quick TD said elsewhere that he runs 15 psi but "insane" boost would be in the mid-20s, where does that leave someone using low-restriction exhaust... if my "10" is his "15", would my proposed "15" equate to his "insane range"?
One issue that strikes me is that I assume the turbo's turbine must be rotating at a much faster speed in my car to produce 15 psi of positive boost, than in a car with more restrictive exhaust. I expect this would lead to increased shaft wear and possibly all manner of other evils, such as super-heating the intake air perhaps, forcing the turbo outside of its efficiency range? If I'm wrong on this assumption, please enlighten me.
On gasoline-powered turbo cars, installing low-restriction exhaust can be a danger as well as an opportunity. The engine will knock (detonate) more readily, and at lower boost pressure than before. I'm a bit concerned the diesel is the same way, but I simply don't understand the comparative physics in each type of engine.
So, before I hook up a Grainger valve to "cheat" my wastegate into letting me get up to 15 psi (given that the rod is too short to get me there the easy way), I'd be curious to hear some ideas thrown around on this point.
In case it matters to the equation, my pump has been modified by Giles at Superior Fuel Injection, and the LDA is set up to produce sufficient fuel up to 15 psi positive boost. The question is whether the other parts of the engine will stand up to that, since I suspect that "my 15 is not your 15".