The Red Ranger Posted July 22, 2009 Posted July 22, 2009 So I know basics about turbo chargers, but I am curious if someone can help me out with diagrams, or pictures, or a how to on how to build a twin turbo for model kits.
pharr7226 Posted July 23, 2009 Posted July 23, 2009 Take a look at this http://www.bankspower.com/videos/show/88-t...ngines-and-kits
BigGary Posted July 23, 2009 Posted July 23, 2009 The Monogram 1/24 '56 Chevy has a SBC with twin turbos. Both turbos blow into a single tube and into the carb. I have this kit to trade. Gary
The Red Ranger Posted July 23, 2009 Author Posted July 23, 2009 Wow pharr thank you a lot! as far as the 56 chevy, sounds intriguing but I think I'm going to hand build it.
The Red Ranger Posted July 23, 2009 Author Posted July 23, 2009 How do intercoolers fit into the mix? can you use intercoolers on a twin turbo setup cause I know they are used on some or most regular turbo setups.
diymirage Posted July 24, 2009 Posted July 24, 2009 How do intercoolers fit into the mix? can you use intercoolers on a twin turbo setup cause I know they are used on some or most regular turbo setups. the idea is simple when you compress anything you create heat on top of that the turbo is driven by hot exhaust gasses so you have cold air going through a hot turbo and being compressed the result is hot air (regardless of the amount of turbos it passes through) now, here is the main issue, you are building a twin turbo, not a bi-turbo right ? that means you have two identical turbos, one per bank so here is the intake path air filter -> turbo turbo -> intercooler intercooler -> intake manifold or throtle body so in short, your awnser is YES, put a intercooler between the turbos output and the engines intake
The Red Ranger Posted July 24, 2009 Author Posted July 24, 2009 the idea is simple when you compress anything you create heat on top of that the turbo is driven by hot exhaust gasses so you have cold air going through a hot turbo and being compressed the result is hot air (regardless of the amount of turbos it passes through) now, here is the main issue, you are building a twin turbo, not a bi-turbo right ? that means you have two identical turbos, one per bank so here is the intake path air filter -> turbo turbo -> intercooler intercooler -> intake manifold or throtle body so in short, your awnser is YES, put a intercooler between the turbos output and the engines intake Doesn't bi-turbo mean the same thing though? if not what is the difference cause google search only said they are the same thing.
diymirage Posted July 24, 2009 Posted July 24, 2009 Doesn't bi-turbo mean the same thing though? if not what is the difference cause google search only said they are the same thing. most of the times a bi-turbo setup will consist of a inline engine (as mentioned by the red ranger) with two turbos HOWEVER the two turbos on a bi-turbo engine are NOT identical you see, smaller turbos creat less boost then larger turbos but smaller turbos create boost sooner then larger turbos and vice versa so here is a hypothetical setup on a bi turbo lets say were using a volkwagen K03 and K04 turbo the K03 starts making power at about 2700 RPM and will push 17 PSI through about 4000 RMP and taper down after them the K04 starts making power at about 3800 RPM and will push 23 PSI through redline so the smaller turbo is effective at lower RMP but looses efficiency after 4000 RPM the larger turbo makes great power on higher RPM range but has terrible boost lag since it doenst kick un untill 3800 RPM by installing both of them on a single engine you can get the of the line performance of the K03 with the top end power of the K04 cliff notes : a twin turbo uses identical turbos, one for each bank a bi-turbo uses two different turbos on one bank of cylinders
The Red Ranger Posted July 31, 2009 Author Posted July 31, 2009 most of the times a bi-turbo setup will consist of a inline engine (as mentioned by the red ranger) with two turbos HOWEVER the two turbos on a bi-turbo engine are NOT identical you see, smaller turbos creat less boost then larger turbos but smaller turbos create boost sooner then larger turbos and vice versa so here is a hypothetical setup on a bi turbo lets say were using a volkwagen K03 and K04 turbo the K03 starts making power at about 2700 RPM and will push 17 PSI through about 4000 RMP and taper down after them the K04 starts making power at about 3800 RPM and will push 23 PSI through redline so the smaller turbo is effective at lower RMP but looses efficiency after 4000 RPM the larger turbo makes great power on higher RPM range but has terrible boost lag since it doenst kick un untill 3800 RPM by installing both of them on a single engine you can get the of the line performance of the K03 with the top end power of the K04 cliff notes : a twin turbo uses identical turbos, one for each bank a bi-turbo uses two different turbos on one bank of cylinders So what if you have a V engine, could you theoretically take the Bi-turbo concept and apply it, creating essentially a quad-turbo? I'm assuming room to fit this becomes an issue, but phew thatd be interesting.
diymirage Posted July 31, 2009 Posted July 31, 2009 So what if you have a V engine, could you theoretically take the Bi-turbo concept and apply it, creating essentially a quad-turbo? I'm assuming room to fit this becomes an issue, but phew thatd be interesting. im sure you could however it seems like when car manufactures want to go this route the apply the principle of "compound boost" usually a turbo blowing into a superchager but i digest yes, you could build a quad turbo V engine as long as you have a bi-turbo setup on both banks
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