Junkyard Dog
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The question is in the title.
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I do not yet know how low. I am trying to learn from folks who actually know, what is possible? The idea, however, is to have a system that I can adjust, and maybe use a low boost for HPDE track days (5 psi?) and turn it up for other things (like making a grocery runYou could run no spring and control pressure with CO2 if you really wanted to
However, the wastegate only bleeds off so much boost so there's a minimum it will make no matter what.
Why turn it down so low?
).That is sort of what I have been learning by reading on the internet. There just is not a lot of information about lowering boost. The key seemed to be the waste gate spring pressure, however, as the minimum boost. Your post now tells me where the boost control is (between the waste gate and the intake manifold), which helps me understand a little more. Thank you for responding.Turbo boost is controlled by a wastegate spring, so whatever the wastegate is sprung for will dictate your starting boost. A boost control solenoid is installed in-between the wastegate and the manifold to allow higher than sprung boost levels by keeping pressure below the wastegate trigger until the turbo produces the higher programmed pressure.
Magical AI can't answer this one? Geez.
Yes your wastegate spring dictates the lowest amount of boost its possible to run.
If you had a spring pushing against another spring, the spring being pushed upon would need to push harder (increasing boost)
You can also run less boost by not flooring it.
You aren't going to be on boost for 20 minutes.I don't want to tear into my short block and increase the ring gap, so running E85 and keeping the boost lower would keep the rings from expanding too much from the buildup of heat over a 20-30 minute run on track while still letting me turn up the boost higher when I am not going to be hammering the car full throttle again and again and again for half an hour.
True, but the heat in the chamber and cylinder wall and rings will continue to build over that 20 minutes. It just is not the same as drag racing. E85 will limit the heat build up on the rings. Lower boost will also limit the heat build up (a sort of obvious statement, but, well, there it is. More obviously 0 boost would be no additional heat, right? LOL).You aren't going to be on boost for 20 minutes.
Thank you for that suggestion. I may very well do that.I would ask the Hellion Facebook group or email Hellion themselves. I'm sure someone has tried to run a minimum boost setup.
Well, I guess I would dispute whether E85 would help with this or not (if you are even contending it would not help). Folks who "do it all the time" are probably going further than they would have or even could have gotten away with on just gasoline. That is not what we are talking about here. I am not looking to raise the boost due to using E85. I am just looking to keep the rings cooler than they otherwise would be running 93 octane, at a lower boost level for some extra margin of safety on a road course.E85 helps against detonation but the 'cooler burning' isn't going to stop you from cracking a ring/piston, people do it all the time.
I'd like to see some numbers on EGT's and coolant temps and whatever else, doing pulls on e85 vs 93. I posted before some study Ford did and as far as exhaust manifold temps went there wasn't much difference.You did not actually say whether you think E85 makes any difference at all on ring temperature and the associated thermal expansion (until the gap disappears!). I am not disputing that folks damage their engines on E85, but you have to know a lot more than that one fact before you can draw any inferences from it relevant to the scope of this discussion.
(oh, and I could be completely wrong about E85 and a reduced thermal expansion of the rings compared to 93 octane - I honestly don't know this. It just makes sense).
The most reliable coolant temp reduction from E85 on track I could find was one poster who stated 3° C (going off memory, so I could be wrong). Mainly I found lots of speculation, and, like you said, coolant temps just cruising around on the street, which is not particularly relevant to tracking. Even if there was a coolant temp reduction, which is nice, it does not mean that there is less heat in the piston ring and therefore less expansion. I do not know whether there is, or is not, less heat in the piston ring. All I can find are references to less heat in the combustion chamber.I'd like to see some numbers on EGT's and coolant temps and whatever else, doing pulls on e85 vs 93. I posted before some study Ford did and as far as exhaust manifold temps went there wasn't much difference.
For 20 minutes of load you're going to hit whatever danger zone there is, gas or e85
e85 'burns cooler' but I think people really overestimate how much and the effects (or lack thereof).
I mean we get people who say they run e85 and their car runs 10 degrees less coolant temp on the street....sounds as silly as the people who put a strut tower brace on and take their car around the block and talk about how it leans less and tightened it up...
Meth setup/tune is more complicated (you have to pull fuel for the meth you add)Thought of 50/50 Meth/Water injection? It does what E85 does, but I believe it's more effective.
