User not logged in - login - register
Home Calendar Books School Tool Photo Gallery Message Boards Users Statistics Advertise Site Info
go to bottom | |
 Message Boards » » more pics of the turbo buildup Page [1] 2 3 4 5 ... 9, Next  
arghx
Deucefest '04
7584 Posts
user info
edit post

alright well I posted the exhaust in another thread, now here are more pics of my progress. From now on I will keep it all to this thread so I don't clutter up the place.

Car is 1988 Mazda Rx-7 Turbo II. Turbo upgrade consists first of an HKS cast iron, undivided log-style manifold. The turbo itself is a T04S--a 60 trim compressor, full T4 (not t3/t4) with .96 A/R hotside and .70 A/R compressor. Fuel consists of 720 cc primary injectors and 1680cc injectors with an Aeromotive adjustable fuel pressure regulator.



Here is what the engine bay looks like right now. The upper intake manifold is not actually bolted down right now because I still have to plug in a few connectors. I replaced the main engine wiring harness with another one from a parts car, for two reasons:

1) it was in bad shape anyway. It had been hacked up near the ECU to install an SAFC and other stuff. I no longer plan to use any piggback controllers.
2) As a side benefit, I bought an 87 harness with an OEM resistor pack for use of peak & hold/low impedence injectors. All big injectors are low impedence (2-3 ohm resistance versus like 12-14 on most saturated/high impedence injectors). So this allowed me to install the Bosch 1680cc injectors without wiring in resistors separately.



Here is bad pic of the mayhem under the upper intake manifold. Those are mostly connectors for the injectors, water temperature sensor (for the ECU), intake air temperature sensor and throttle position sensor. Absent are the 7 emissions solenoids and associated vacuum spider.



Under the carpet on the passenger side is where the stock ECU goes. Here I have removed the stock ECU and installed an Apex'i Power FC (which is for a 3rd generation car) and the adapter harness I need to make it work. I considered the AEM EMS but it is most rotary tuners use a Power FC or Haltech.



Luckily, the Power FC allows me to remove the bulky stock flapper-type airflow meter. This gives me enough room to actually put an air filter on the turbo (after cutting the fan shroud). The fitment is really tight here, and I'll be the first to admit that the intercooler piping is ghetto. I had to hack up the piping that was designed for my stock turbo. I plan to get it welded once the car is running. that pipe will probably blow off as soon as I get into boost.

Unfortunately, the only place I can think of going to tig weld intercooler piping is Phantasm... I'm open to more suggestions. It needs to be a place with the tools, skills, and knowledge for custom intercooler setups and it needs to be pretty close. The car is in North Raleigh.



Last is what I did today. I upgraded my previous Warlbro 255 fuel pump for a Supra TT pump. I was suprised how much bigger the Supra pump is physically... they are supposed to flow more too, of course flow is highly dependent on voltage.

[Edited on October 27, 2007 at 5:58 PM. Reason : .]

10/27/2007 5:45:00 PM

baonest
All American
47902 Posts
user info
edit post

get it over with and post the final product.

or post it all when you get done.

none of this halfway house BS

10/27/2007 5:50:06 PM

beethead
All American
6513 Posts
user info
edit post

i know a guy that can do piping.

10/28/2007 12:23:40 AM

slowblack96
All American
4999 Posts
user info
edit post

as much as i hate to say it, danny at phantasm does great mandrel bending. i would talk to him. or hit up savanna13 on CN he can hook you up with him

10/28/2007 1:01:19 AM

arghx
Deucefest '04
7584 Posts
user info
edit post

someone who could make house calls would be ideal, although that would probably be too much to ask

10/28/2007 1:56:57 AM

slowblack96
All American
4999 Posts
user info
edit post

thats not gonna happen cause im guessing you want custom shit right. well that requires bringing a heavy ass bender and a welder and lots of stock.

10/28/2007 9:56:26 AM

Jeepman
All American
5882 Posts
user info
edit post

you could just get someone to trailer your car to the exhaust shop. that'd probably be the easiest way to get custom stuff done.

10/28/2007 12:41:25 PM

arghx
Deucefest '04
7584 Posts
user info
edit post

I'll probably just drive it with the ghetto couplers (there are a couple more not pictured to route the piping around the power steering pump) to wherever I end up taking it.

A big issue here is the fact that my driveway is steep enough (uphill) that it's highly unlikely I could ever push the car back into the garage. So if I tow it somewhere, they do the exhaust (I need a custom midpipe to connect the downpipe and new catback) and intercooler piping, and the car turns out to be undriveable for whatever reason I'm in trouble. It could have some bullshit leak, tuning issue, whatever, but I can't work on it on the street in my neighborhood either.

10/28/2007 1:58:32 PM

slowblack96
All American
4999 Posts
user info
edit post

most good tow truck drivers can put a car where ever they want if the space is big enough. so towing back into your driveway wouldnt be a problem

10/28/2007 5:36:13 PM

Specter
All American
6575 Posts
user info
edit post

You can't go wrong with silicone. At least for temporary purposes.

10/28/2007 9:06:11 PM

69
Suspended
15861 Posts
user info
edit post

Quote :
"A big issue here is the fact that my driveway is steep enough (uphill) that it's highly unlikely I could ever push the car back into the garage."


Quote :
"most good tow truck drivers can put a car where ever they want if the space is big enough. so towing back into your driveway wouldnt be a problem"



CAN YOU READ ENGRISH MOTHER FUCKER? THATS NOT HIS GOD DAMNED PROBLEM WITH IT YOU STUPID FUCK

10/28/2007 9:31:43 PM

engrish
All American
2380 Posts
user info
edit post

I can read.

10/28/2007 9:38:51 PM

slowblack96
All American
4999 Posts
user info
edit post

Quote :
"push the car back into the garage.""


correct me if im wrong but i think he is worried about getting the car back in the garage if anything goes wrong after the build?

10/28/2007 11:08:19 PM

pwnt
All American
3052 Posts
user info
edit post

Quote :
"correct me if im wrong but i think he is worried about getting the car back in the garage if anything goes wrong after the build?"


He was trying to correct you. Have you ever personally tried to back a trailer/vehicle up a steep driveway????

It doesn't work. Geometry. Crazy mathmatics and science kinda stuff.

Much like 350 volt heat pumps. Or 277 volt heat pumps.

[Edited on October 28, 2007 at 11:55 PM. Reason : .]

10/28/2007 11:40:34 PM

JBaz
All American
16764 Posts
user info
edit post

Quote :
"correct me if im wrong "

Haha... nuff said.

10/28/2007 11:42:55 PM

arghx
Deucefest '04
7584 Posts
user info
edit post

made a lot of progress this weekend. I gotta find my camera and see if i can get some pics up. The intake manifold is back on, all the wiring is hooked up, the new catback is on, basically everything but the external wastegate and the downpipe is done. I had an ebay HKS knockoff wastegate that came with the turbo and manifold I bought, but I am not happy with it so I am waiting for my brand new (real) HKS 40mm wastegate to come in this week. Then the car should hopefully start up and be half driveable so I can get it to the shop to get some welding done to it.

Oh and wiring up an Innovate LC-1 using its 5 volt analog ouput is a BITCH in comparison to the plug and play AEM unit for example. 6 ground wires alone. The Innovate has more features and better accuracy due to its recalibration capabilities.

[Edited on November 24, 2007 at 2:21 AM. Reason : LC-1]

11/24/2007 2:14:55 AM

theDuke866
All American
52839 Posts
user info
edit post

Quote :
"danny at phantasm does great mandrel bending."


does he actually have a mandrel bender there, or does he weld together pieces the way R&J does?

11/24/2007 3:25:29 AM

tripleD4u
All American
6247 Posts
user info
edit post

bigger block FTW

11/24/2007 7:23:17 AM

underPSI
tillerman
14085 Posts
user info
edit post

Quote :
"Unfortunately, the only place I can think of going to tig weld intercooler piping is Phantasm"


what's wrong with that? all they do now is custom turbo builds. i was actually pretty impressed with what's been going on there now. danny is great at tig welding.

11/24/2007 9:20:26 AM

Mark VII
All American
2003 Posts
user info
edit post

Yeah Danny at Phantasm is actually a very good welder, with a nice quality welder...honestly I would trust him to weld just about anyting I own, he has welded bike parts for both me and my wife, and does turbo parts for both phantasm and turbotime.

[Edited on November 24, 2007 at 10:04 AM. Reason : .]

11/24/2007 10:03:17 AM

arghx
Deucefest '04
7584 Posts
user info
edit post



Here is the new exhaust installed. They are just polished 3" tips. The previous Greddy exhaust had 5 inch canisters. This new exhaust should both flow better (larger diameter) and sound quieter due to the muffler design.








My friends and I fixed a small fuel leak, routed some electrical connectors and vacuum lines, put the manifold back on and connected some intercooler piping. I also had to cut the fan shroud further because the turbo intake was not lining up flush with the compressor inlet and thus was not secure in the coupler.



finally I pretty much had to figure out all this wiring of the wideband and Apex'i Power FC by reading a ton of instructions and threads on rx-7 forums. I made this wiring diagram to help me.

11/24/2007 3:21:11 PM

theDuke866
All American
52839 Posts
user info
edit post

this might turn out to be a pretty sweet ride

although i would've put an LS1 in it instead

11/24/2007 4:03:34 PM

sumfoo1
soup du hier
41043 Posts
user info
edit post



now in most cars an ls1 isn't much of a boat anchor BUT WHEN YOU'RE SWAPPING OUT A 1300CC ROTARY IT IS.

11/24/2007 5:18:06 PM

BigBlueRam
All American
16852 Posts
user info
edit post

yet again, you open your mouth about shit you know nothing about. an ls1/t56 swapped fc/fd is heavier by 100-200lbs. at the most, and the majority of that comes in the center of the car at the transmission.

weight distribution and corner weights are actually BETTER in some cases depending on the exact swap and how it's executed.

[Edited on November 24, 2007 at 5:26 PM. Reason : .]

11/24/2007 5:22:34 PM

sumfoo1
soup du hier
41043 Posts
user info
edit post

so what your saying is a motor smaller than most transmissions weighs the same as an aluminum small block v8.

270lbs =/= 450lbs not to mention the additional length which would require the motor to be moved farther forward ohh and these are only engine weights since you already proclaimed that most of the weight comes from the transmission change now will you please shut your retarded fucking mouth.


you call me dumb non stop but rarely ever support your claim please please go fuck yourself and leave me alone

IF YOU MOVE THE FUCKING FIREWALL ITS BETTER

but then of course if you move the stock firewall and engine back too its better.


340lbs is the HEAVIEST of the 2 rotor rotaries ...

[Edited on November 24, 2007 at 5:37 PM. Reason : .]

11/24/2007 5:31:28 PM

BigBlueRam
All American
16852 Posts
user info
edit post

don't take my word for it, do the fucking research yourself. this is one of THE most commonly discussed topics on the rx7 boards. a simple google search should bring up tons of results, i know you're good at that.

no one even said anything about moving the firewall, retard.

seriously, have you ever even TOUCHED any of the cars in question? looked at the parts in person? SEEN OR RIDDEN IN A SWAPPED ONE VS. A STOCK ONE?

Quote :
"340lbs is the HEAVIEST of the 2 rotor rotaries"

yeah, and an ls1 is 390lbs. so what's your point?



[Edited on November 24, 2007 at 5:39 PM. Reason : el es won]

11/24/2007 5:38:19 PM

sumfoo1
soup du hier
41043 Posts
user info
edit post

an fd but then the ls1 was boosted too so there was a little more of a legitimate reason

you can't honestly tell me you think some garage monster by some do it yourself mechanic with very little fab skills will actually turn out better than just modifying a car with stock locations

yes you can beat stock but you also have to know what the fuck your doing
and the main benefit is torque.


i just don't like it when people change the soul of a car an RX isn't supposed to drive like an fbody

not saying f bodies are bad or that they handle bad ... its just not the intent of the car.


350 is fully dressed to the clutch with exhaust manifold and twin turbos in this case 390 is a long block... i'm not dumb man...

this probably has a tubular header and obviously it never had the 2 turbo setup and even if it did swapping to a big single is a significant weight loss.
[Edited on November 24, 2007 at 5:44 PM. Reason : .]

[Edited on November 24, 2007 at 5:46 PM. Reason : .]

11/24/2007 5:43:35 PM

arghx
Deucefest '04
7584 Posts
user info
edit post

a couple notes on LS1 swaps...

-- FYI the heaviest parts of a rotary engine are its cast iron parts of course. In the shortblock there are 5 housings, 3 are iron, and two (rotor housings) are aluminum. The new rotary engines I posted about I think have 3 aluminum housings and 2 iron housings to reduce weight.

-- the overall weight of a rotary longblock is just going to depend which one you are talking about. The FD's is the heaviest. It has the most bullshit on it.

-- the key to a good LS1 swap is to pick the right chassis with the right options. The most desireable ones would be a base model FD or the sport model FC, available only in 86 and 87. The base FD just had cloth interior, no rear wiper or extra sound stuff, no sunroof, etc. it's about 75lbs lighter than the touring, so 2800 vs 2875 curb weight. The lightest FC, the one I mentioned, was 2600lbs and the heaviest (excluding convertible) was 3000, and that was the 89-91 Turbo. My 88 nonturbo weighed 2720 and my 88 Turbo weighed 2850, both curb weights.

So in the end, the weight differences and the weight balance difference between a rotary powered Rx-7 and an LS1 powered has more to do with the exact models and options that the respective cars came with from the factory and which of these options you choose to retain when you tear the car apart to do the swap. An LS1 is heavier, yes, but in the end it all comes down to how you build it.

I have a friend with a 94 Fd. He blew the original engine at 80k, put in a built single turbo rotary, never got it tuned and blew it a year later. He now has a stock LS1 in there (stock heads/cams and I don't even think he has headers) and ran a 12.6 on 255 Falken Azenis. It's a quick car and it still handles well... but it's not something I would ever personally do to an Rx-7.

[Edited on November 24, 2007 at 5:59 PM. Reason : .]

11/24/2007 5:52:56 PM

BigBlueRam
All American
16852 Posts
user info
edit post

Quote :
"i just don't like it when people change the soul of a car an RX"

okay, well if that's your argument, fine. that's an opinion thing. that's not what you said though. even if you don't like swaps, you can't argue that it doesn't make for a superior chassis with equal effort/cost.

Quote :
"you can't honestly tell me you think some garage monster by some do it yourself mechanic with very little fab skills will actually turn out better than just modifying a car with stock locations"

it's not rocket science. there are even kits out there now that make it practically a bolt in affair.

Quote :
"yes you can beat stock but you also have to know what the fuck your doing
and the main benefit is torque. "

a little torque is hardly it. it's LOTS more hp and torque, all the way across the board. better weight balance in some cases too.

Quote :
"not saying f bodies are bad or that they handle bad ... its just not the intent of the car."

in stock form, f-bodys handle like shit. ls1's in stock suspensioned rx7's don't.

11/24/2007 5:53:06 PM

BigBlueRam
All American
16852 Posts
user info
edit post

Quote :
"390 is a long block."

yeah, out of the crate. a little more than a standard long block. fully dressed is 450. clutch/flywheel is 490. keep in mind that's a/c AND power steering. two things some fc's don't have. don't forget the intercooler and other turbo related crap too.

bottom line, front end weight differences in the majority of swaps comes up to 25-75lbs. the rest is in the transmission.

^^exactly, well said. the advantages of an ls1 are clear, but the whole joy (if you can call it that) of owning a rotary rx7 goes away.

[Edited on November 24, 2007 at 6:02 PM. Reason : .]

11/24/2007 5:59:14 PM

arghx
Deucefest '04
7584 Posts
user info
edit post

it would be a more accurate comparison to look at an LS1/T56 vs a single turbo 13B-REW with a stainless steel manifold and all emissions equipment removed. That's the choice an FD owner usually has to make.

also note that the torque of an LS1 is a lot harder on the drivetrain. A stock FD drivetrain can do 10's easily with the lower torque of the rotary, but it's not quite as durable with an LS1.

11/24/2007 6:03:32 PM

BigBlueRam
All American
16852 Posts
user info
edit post

yeah, you're bringing in a lot of valid variables.

BUT

his original post was this:
Quote :
"now in most cars an ls1 isn't much of a boat anchor BUT WHEN YOU'RE SWAPPING OUT A 1300CC ROTARY IT IS."

which couldn't be further from the truth, different models be damned.

11/24/2007 6:06:34 PM

sumfoo1
soup du hier
41043 Posts
user info
edit post

yeah... which it is... when you nearly double the weight of the alternate engine transmission package it is an anchor in this case... hell it will save weight in tons of engine swaps... but this one it is still heavy and a poor choice imho.

unless drag racing is the goal

the stock engine in his single turbo car is still 150lbs less... than a ls1 now in a light car THAT IS A SHIT TON. i'm sorry but it is...

look mah its a 150lb boat anchor

http://www.jmsonline.net/ANCHOR-MUSHROOM-150-LB.htm

back to the point of this... the car looks great next time i'd love a ride when its finished and i'm visiting r town

[Edited on November 24, 2007 at 6:18 PM. Reason : .]

11/24/2007 6:12:35 PM

BigBlueRam
All American
16852 Posts
user info
edit post

you need to go back and reread. in the real world (which is what most of us live in, not your magazine fantasy world), the weight differences do not add up to what's on paper.

i'm not saying you couldn't end up with a swap that's 150-200lbs. more JUST on the front end, i'm saying it rarely if ever happens. 90% of them end up with a total curb weight of 150-200lbs. more, much of that being distrubuted evenly front/rear.

11/24/2007 6:47:36 PM

sumfoo1
soup du hier
41043 Posts
user info
edit post

and you're the one who brought distribution into it... i just called it a boat anchor ...

and you are the one who took the 350 as the baseline number when i said that its the HEAVIEST 2 rotor
which would be the one in the FD due to the twin turbos and clumsy manifold they require. Which is certainly NOT the motor in his car.

listen you dont like me i know this... but you fabricated an argument that either isn't what i was trying to say or that you're calling 150lbs and insignificant amount of weight ... which may be the case in my moms 2 ton luxury car but is not the case here.

11/24/2007 6:53:22 PM

BigBlueRam
All American
16852 Posts
user info
edit post

again, you need to go back and read the thread.

Quote :
"you're the one who brought distribution into it... i just called it a boat anchor"

yeah, i did... because you said it was a boat anchor. the numbers people are getting after the swap prove it's not. distribution and corner weights.

Quote :
"listen you dont like me i know this..."

it has nothing to do with me not liking you. i don't even know you. what i don't like is the stupid, whimsical crap you post and then try to pass it off as fact. what you read in a magazine, google, or some engineering textbook is not always the way things are.

i didn't fabricate anything. you said it was a boat anchor, i responded with several reasons why it's not. then you proceeded to go into some rant about losing its soul and engine weights, neither of which makes any difference for the argument at hand.

like i said, if you want to say it takes away the soul of the car, that's fine... i agree. saying it detracts from ANY performance aspect is just asinine though.

Quote :
"you're calling 150lbs and insignificant amount of weight"

when you're talking about nearly doubling the stock power output, it's nothing. period.

again, just so you understand 150lbs. is an average OVERALL curb weight increase for most swaps. i'm not arguing that there isn't a significant weight difference in the two motors, but that's NOT how it works out in the car. the actual difference in front end weight is typically 25-75lbs.

i don't know what else to tell you. maybe one day when you get your license back, you'll be able to actually get out and experience some cars from somewhere else besides a computer.

[Edited on November 25, 2007 at 2:21 AM. Reason : .]

11/25/2007 2:20:14 AM

arghx
Deucefest '04
7584 Posts
user info
edit post

Quote :
"and you are the one who took the 350 as the baseline number when i said that its the HEAVIEST 2 rotor
which would be the one in the FD due to the twin turbos and clumsy manifold they require. Which is certainly NOT the motor in his car.
"


Once again, I think the debate is shifting to a discussion of the motor when really the discussion should be of the chassis and options of particular models.

The FD shortblock is about the same weight as my FC shortblock (shortblock being the beer keg of 5 housings, eccentric shaft, and rotors, sans all manifolds). The only difference really is that the rotors were a bit lighter in the FD but that only matters for rotational mass. The longblock is somewhat heavier (I can't quantify off the top of my head) because of the extra actuators and the unusual twin turbo configuration. FYI The turbo manifolds themselves are almost identical in dimensions, but the FD uses a really weird twin setup that is unlike say a 300zx or a VR-4 (not sure about Supra TT), whereby the hotside for both turbos is one integral piece. It's really one hotside and two compressor sides if you pull the assembly off the car, and to that piece is bolted the various actuators that run the sequential system. But that is a minute detail that needs no more discussion.

Once you go single on a FD all that bullshit is gone, and for our purposes the differences between 13B engine models are nil in terms of weight. So once you start building an older 13BT like mine, an FD 13BREW, or even the JDM 13BRE 2 rotor cosmo engine (antecedent to the 20B) they all weigh the same. Arguing differences between particular rotary engines is a pointless excercise because they all weigh about the same once you do a big single, no matter what you started with. So saying that it's really a lot more weight if you compare an LS1 to say a nonturbo 2nd gen motor is pointless because the choice is between an LS1 or a built single turbo engine, not a 20 year old motor that puts 125 to the wheels on a good day.

Getting back to the chassis, an FD is lighter than my car. The chassis uses more aluminum parts, the single exhaust is lighter, the cooling system is lighter (and WAY shittier) and the car is about the size of a 1st gen in dimensions whereas the FC is the biggest Rx-7 ever made. The FD really is the best car to put an LS1 in if you don't want a completely bare-bones vehicle like the 86-87 Sport model which had no sunroof, manual everything, and no power steering.

11/25/2007 3:15:11 AM

theDuke866
All American
52839 Posts
user info
edit post

Quote :
"now in most cars an ls1 isn't much of a boat anchor BUT WHEN YOU'RE SWAPPING OUT A 1300CC ROTARY IT IS."


Negative.

that iron block rotary is heavier than you'd think, given how small it is...not to mention the turbo, intercooler, and piping that goes away when the V8 goes in. I used to think the same thing as you until I read up about it some...the weight penalty isn't that much...I think it's about 60 lbs for an FD...so I'd say still <100 for a Turbo II. I'm a dyed-in-the-wool lightweight sports car fan, and I'd take that extra 60 lbs in an FD without even thinking about it. the increased reliability and power potential would be HUGE.

in addition, the LS1 mounts lower than the 13b, and most of the extra weight is in the T56 transmission (which buys you 6 gears, including a super steep overdrive for the highway), which is very low in the chassis and pretty much centrally located (prob negligable impact on polar moment).

Quote :
"you can't honestly tell me you think some garage monster by some do it yourself mechanic with very little fab skills will actually turn out better than just modifying a car with stock locations"


they make bolt in kits

and you can't honestly tell me that the dude who doesn't really know his shit won't find himself in a world of hurt by fucking around with a turbo 13b.

Quote :
"i just don't like it when people change the soul of a car an RX isn't supposed to drive like an fbody

not saying f bodies are bad or that they handle bad ... its just not the intent of the car"


it isn't gonna drive like an F-body...think of it as an RX-7 with 'Vette power.

and i'll say that F-bods handle bad. I mean, they can generate some respectable numbers in some cases, but I think they feel like fucking battleships.

but yeah, it does sort of lose the soul of the RX-7...the rotary does have its own appeal, I'll admit. Personally, I like them...I've considered buying 2 of them over the years (a modified Turbo II, and an FD that my dad had when I was a kid...managed to track it down. Didn't manage to strike a deal on either of them, though). I also swore for years that I would own an FD when I got out of college, but when the rubber hit the road, I just couldn't justify paying what they cost with all of the problems they have. I may yet end up with a Chevy-powered one, though...at least that would take care of the biggest problem they have.

Quote :
" The FD really is the best car to put an LS1 in if you don't want a completely bare-bones vehicle like the 86-87 Sport model which had no sunroof, manual everything, and no power steering."


Yeah, my dilemma isn't between RX-7s...it's between FD and NB Miata (2nd gen)...or going with another car entirely.

Quote :
"it would be a more accurate comparison to look at an LS1/T56 vs a single turbo 13B-REW with a stainless steel manifold and all emissions equipment removed. That's the choice an FD owner usually has to make.

also note that the torque of an LS1 is a lot harder on the drivetrain. A stock FD drivetrain can do 10's easily with the lower torque of the rotary, but it's not quite as durable with an LS1."


Good call on both counts.

of course, in terms of drivetrain, the rear end/axles are about the only thing remaining, and I don't think I'd have any desire to run any faster than well into the 11s, anyway...I'd rather keep it more manageable around a circuit.

11/25/2007 5:18:19 AM

arghx
Deucefest '04
7584 Posts
user info
edit post

if i blew my motor like 3 times i'd consider it, i admit. that's why I'm not sitting here like a hardcore rotary partisan... i have a pretty balanced look at it. but it's still a little unnatural to me.

but then again i've detonated (20psi boost spike), overheated (busted clutch fan), and run my motor on half a quart of oil (boost gauge line got pinched in the oil filter pedestal at the top of the engine and apparently my low oil sender is broken) and it keeps on truckin. hopefully it can handle this kind of power as long as I keep race gas in it, which I fully plan to do.

11/25/2007 11:32:15 AM

Quinn
All American
16417 Posts
user info
edit post

if the car weighs 2800 lbs why go through so much effort to put a v8 in it?

do people do the same for miatas? at least that makes sense

11/25/2007 11:35:03 AM

BigBlueRam
All American
16852 Posts
user info
edit post

^did you read anything posted? the duke, arghx, and myself all explained the primary benefits/gains to doing it.

11/25/2007 1:06:37 PM

arghx
Deucefest '04
7584 Posts
user info
edit post

Wastegate is here! pics later. gotta do homework etc

11/28/2007 3:36:57 PM

sumfoo1
soup du hier
41043 Posts
user info
edit post

NICE... what flavor is it?

^^ yeah you turn an rx-7 into a camaro.



[Edited on November 28, 2007 at 4:27 PM. Reason : .]

11/28/2007 4:08:46 PM

zxappeal
All American
26824 Posts
user info
edit post

Does this mean we crank 'er this weekend, Ray?

By the way, the biggest reason I'd retain the rotary is purely because it's a Wankel and I like oddball shit. Especially if it goes like stink.

It really is hard to argue with an LS1, but I tend to (a) like weird shit, (b) don't find pushrod motors that attractive, though most these days are truly bulletproof...they just aren't "pretty" or neat enough, (c) enjoy blowing money on really expensive car parts.

Ray's really done a lot of homework on this, and he devours any information he can find on the subject. Furthermore, he's not afraid to jump in and get his hands dirty doing it. I say GG, man. It's fun doing this shit purely for the geek factor. Why do you think I have a thing for Datsun/Nissan straight sixes (and really every other Nissan engine)?

11/28/2007 4:13:38 PM

arghx
Deucefest '04
7584 Posts
user info
edit post





again, excuse the poor image quality. This is a real, brand new HKS 40mm standard wastegate (even comes with unintelligible instructions in Japanese). A very quick mock-up demonstrated that it will bolt up perfectly to my HKS manifold and happens to be the exact diameter of the opening on the manifold's flange. The included allen bolts will also easily fit. Tomorrow I will be assembling a stainless steel 4AN wastegate line for this wastegate so there is no chance of it ever blowing off. When you get this deep into a project you can't halfass anything I've learned. The wastegate has a 10psi spring so I will be running just on wastegate pressure for a while as I tune it. at 10psi It should do at least 300whp in a 2800lb car, whereas on my stock turbo I did 250 and it only held 6 to redline.

I'll probably skip class today (which is technically Thursday) and ruin my perfect attendance to get this thing running, and if for some odd reason all goes well I will drive it to Henry's with an open downpipe to get them to build me a custom midpipe. They will have to order prebent mandrel sections. Then it will go to Phantasm for intercooler piping, and then it will be road tuning.

I may get zxappeal to fabricate me a flange for my wastegate dump pipe. As of now I don't plan on recirculating the wastegate because I have read of noticeable power losses resulting.

[Edited on November 29, 2007 at 2:58 AM. Reason : .]

11/29/2007 2:50:51 AM

theDuke866
All American
52839 Posts
user info
edit post

^ yeah...noticeable power losses are for the birds.

Quote :
"^^ yeah you turn an rx-7 into a camaro."





No...you make it a faster, easier to drive, FAR more dependable RX-7.


Quote :
"By the way, the biggest reason I'd retain the rotary is purely because it's a Wankel and I like oddball shit. Especially if it goes like stink."


Agreed. I'd like to have a nasty fast 13b powered one, but I'm simply unwilling to treat an engine as a wear item, to be replaced or rebuilt every few years.

of course, an LS1 motivated FD has its own oddball appeal...

Quote :
"It really is hard to argue with an LS1"


Yep. They got that ree-tard strength, man.



(and I don't think anyone can really accuse me of being a domestic v8 musclehead.)

11/29/2007 3:09:19 AM

Seotaji
All American
34244 Posts
user info
edit post

there is a red rx-7 FD


on glenwood.

runs, paint is decent. have no idea of it's condition other than that.

i'd buy it, if i wanted to 3-rotor it.

11/29/2007 9:26:47 AM

zxappeal
All American
26824 Posts
user info
edit post

Quote :
"Agreed. I'd like to have a nasty fast 13b powered one, but I'm simply unwilling to treat an engine as a wear item, to be replaced or rebuilt every few years.
"


Duke, gonna have to bust your chops on this one. You do enough stuff to any engine and that's exactly what it becomes. The big issue with the 13B is mostly FD-related, and that's the apex seals. Well, rotor housing wear, etc...but if you charge your gas with a little lubricating oil instead of relying solely on the squirt pump, that can help. I'd probably want to use Amsoil 2-cycle 100:1 mix. Anybody know of folks who've used this stuff for this reason?

11/29/2007 12:05:58 PM

ScHpEnXeL
Suspended
32613 Posts
user info
edit post

He just doesn't keep them long enough for them to wear

11/29/2007 12:07:11 PM

moparnum5
All American
705 Posts
user info
edit post

^^ I have a friend that has a separate 2-stroke oil tank on his FD set up just for that reason. I thought it was strange when he showed it to me, but makes sense I guess.

11/29/2007 12:25:00 PM

 Message Boards » The Garage » more pics of the turbo buildup Page [1] 2 3 4 5 ... 9, Next  
go to top | |
Admin Options : move topic | lock topic

© 2024 by The Wolf Web - All Rights Reserved.
The material located at this site is not endorsed, sponsored or provided by or on behalf of North Carolina State University.
Powered by CrazyWeb v2.39 - our disclaimer.