Gizmoman; I've been reading your turbo transplant thread...you are doing some good work there....you have way more patience for fabbing than I do. I'm hoping that pushing the K14 to 20psi will add enough air to let me make some long pulls through the hill without making molten aluminum. Time will tell.
Thanks for the chinup. As for the K-14 at 20 PSI, I can't say with any certainty but if I
don't account for the .32 diameter restrictions in my previous drain line, I'd have to say that not only will you stop pushing any air past 18, you may also find oil in your intake (and IC as well). Possibly someone else can chime in on running a K-14 at 20 psi for extended periods but personally, I wouldn't.
Your eye on the EGT gauge (with a fast acting sensor) should keep you from melting down. We all have personal limits and I finally set mine at 18 (still not enough air to keep EGT's under 1300 based on the Giles IP fueling and DIY IC coated with hot oil).
FWIW, I rebuilt the K-14 myself, was very meticulous, and installed a new 360 bearing as well. I don't recall a seal on the compressor side and believe the manufacturer had designed it for 10 PSI max. In other words, this turbo is tough but it's also limited. Even
before the rebuilt Giles IP (stock IP fuel screw turned in 1/2 turn), I was running 15 psi and no EGT sensor or IC at all. The van ran at 15 PSI on nearly any grade above 2% and I watched the temp gauge climb often well past the center (it's happy place) till I gave in, downshifted, and moved in behind the big rigs. One day, I just said F-it, pulled into lane two, and pushed it to the floor - big mistake.