...BTW your Bieber avatar is awesome.-Malone
I think the 1.6IDI vs the 1.9 TDI is a tough call. The TDI is more efficient then the IDI so less heat is wasted out the ex. BUT you loose .3L of displacement. Plus with the higher revs of a 1.6 you might be better with one of malone's 1852v than either of the 15, 17, or 17/22. For either engine. This is just a GUESS. We need someone who has unlimited ammount of resources to test all of our theories.Robbed this off of our very own Malone's site:The biggest advantages the GT1852v turbo has over the popular bolt-on VNT-17 and VNT-17/22 (aka GT1752v) turbos are lower EGT and EMP. The VNT-17/22 tends to struggle with EGT and EMP at 170+ whp and it tends to struggle with boost creep at 180+ whp with the manufacturer’s recommended 26 PSI (1.8 BAR) boost limit. The GT1852v can handle these power figures with ease. The rotationally fired exhaust manifold design allows the GT18v and larger turbos to build boost relatively quickly.
finally, someone paid attention to drive pressure!!drive pressure is a big problem on smaller VNTs at high boost levels.. a vnt15 will make enough drive pressure to blow a head almost off a block..
I think I have a motor capable of more, ARP fastners on all the important bits - rods, mains & head and a Giles pump, and probably less than 20 k miles on a fresh rebuild (pistons, rings, and all that). I do want some reliability (don't want to have to replace a turbo every so often, why I'm want new)- but if I can push 150-170 bhp, I wouldn't mind that either. Within reason anyway. I drive it pretty hard when accelerating, but otherwise cruising I think is relatively soft on it. I prefer it to be my DD - but I have an old golf n/a as backup I'm driving now....trying not to beat around the bush, I guess I want to be able to handle a turbo that somewhat can handle more boost (bit better hp/torque) and not break the bank.
Quotefinally, someone paid attention to drive pressure!!drive pressure is a big problem on smaller VNTs at high boost levels.. a vnt15 will make enough drive pressure to blow a head almost off a block..IF so called "drive pressure" is actually EMP (exhaust manifold pressure) then this can't be true. EMP is in the 10s of psi. Cylinder pressure (BMEP) is in the 1000s of psi in a typical diesel engine, so EMP is not significant. I do not know what wasted your motor, but it wasn't too much pressure in the exhaust manifold. High EMP is self limiting. Just like any other plugged exhaust. If we also experience a boost runaway that is also unlikely to cause the problems that you have had because BMEP is limited by the amount of fuel available. (AEBE)
Toby, This mysterious "drive pressure" is all the rage with the Pickumup modifiers. They even have gauges to read this ethereal pressure. Pros basically call it "Hey dummy, your choke point has been reached". Drive pressure is an indication that the turbos limit has been reached, with all of the wonderful symptoms of "barking", etc. If you know, the following.Engine sizeRPMBoost Which will give you your Mass Flow RateThen you couple this with your pressure ratio, plot it on your Map, and you never have to worry about "drivepressure" because you have claculated were you "choke ". Science, don't leave home without it.BlueMule
I received an email from Malone - Mark, he says the 1852V is no longer available and is out of production. I was under the impression that he sold them, but he doesn't. The tuning side is his forte?So where does a VNT 15 choke? Is 17 any better for choke and drive pressure issues? I'm going to be looking for this info - I see faq doesn't have any VNT maps. Any help is appreciated.