Menu
Home
Post Something
Forums
Current Activity
New posts
Search forums
What's new
New posts
Latest activity
News & Features
The Marketplace
Cars for Sale
Engine and Performance
Chassis and Wheels
Exterior and Body
Interior and Cockpit
ICE - In Car Entertainment
Car Shops and Services
Toys and Wares
All Other Stuff
Jobs and Vacancies
Looking For
Members
Log in
Register
What's new
Search
Search
Search titles only
By:
Current Activity
New posts
Search forums
Menu
Log in
Register
Reply to thread
See what others are reading now! Try Forums >
Current Activity
Home
Forums
Main Forums
Car Talk
Forced Induction & Engine Management
V8 Turbo Lover
JavaScript is disabled. For a better experience, please enable JavaScript in your browser before proceeding.
You are using an out of date browser. It may not display this or other websites correctly.
You should upgrade or use an
alternative browser
.
Message
<blockquote data-quote="APTuning" data-source="post: 1063516896" data-attributes="member: 110583"><p>Turbo V8 Facts of Life </p><p></p><p>Have you ever ridden in a vehicle powered by a properly engineered twin-turbo V8? No, a single-turbo V8, or heaven forbid, a single-turbo four cylinder is not the same thing, not even close.</p><p>We’ve all heard the wisdom that there’s no substitute for cubic inches, but cubic inches of what? Is it cubic inches of engine that count, or cubic inches of air in the combustion chamber? It’s obviously the latter. So consider this, 15 psi of boost effectively doubles the size of an engine. That means 15 psi of boost will make a 350-cubic-inch performance engine seem like a 700-cubic-inch performance engine!</p><p></p><p>Actually, this picture isn’t accurate. If you understand engines, you’ll immediately realize that 15-psi boost more than doubles the performance an engine. It does this for two reasons: first, the internal friction of the engine remains largely the same regardless of boost, so the extra power from turbocharging is almost totally available to power the vehicle; and second, the 15 psi of boost in the induction system actually helps push the pistons down on the intake stroke whereas the intake stroke created a pumping loss (negative torque) when the engine was normally aspirated.</p><p>Now you may be thinking that the turbochargers create exhaust backpressure that increases the pumping loss on the exhaust stroke, but let’s go back to the first sentence of this discussion — we’re talking about a “properly engineered” system. That means the exhaust restriction created by the dual turbos will be minor, and that boost pressure will always exceed exhaust system backpressure. Simply translated, in terms of performance, a good twin-turbo 350 V8 will turn your inside out!</p><p>Okay, just for fun, let’s compare our 350 twin-turbo V8 at 15-psi boost to a 120-cubic-inch compact four cylinder running 30 psi of boost — twice that of the V8. By our rule of thumb, the little four-banger will now be flowing air equivalent to a 360-cubic-inch normally aspirated engine. That’s impressive for a small engine, but it will still have only half the power potential of our twin-turbo V8 running at half the boost. If you push the V8 to 30-psi boost, you’ll have the equivalent of 1050 cubic inches and over 1500 hp, if it is done correctly.</p><p></p><p><span style="font-size: 18px">Turbocharging is fun. It’s addictive.</span></p><p></p><p><a href="http://advancedperformancetuning.blogspot.com/2011/04/turbo-v8-facts-of-life.html" target="_blank">Advanced Performance Tuning: Turbo V8 Facts of Life</a></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="APTuning, post: 1063516896, member: 110583"] Turbo V8 Facts of Life Have you ever ridden in a vehicle powered by a properly engineered twin-turbo V8? No, a single-turbo V8, or heaven forbid, a single-turbo four cylinder is not the same thing, not even close. We’ve all heard the wisdom that there’s no substitute for cubic inches, but cubic inches of what? Is it cubic inches of engine that count, or cubic inches of air in the combustion chamber? It’s obviously the latter. So consider this, 15 psi of boost effectively doubles the size of an engine. That means 15 psi of boost will make a 350-cubic-inch performance engine seem like a 700-cubic-inch performance engine! Actually, this picture isn’t accurate. If you understand engines, you’ll immediately realize that 15-psi boost more than doubles the performance an engine. It does this for two reasons: first, the internal friction of the engine remains largely the same regardless of boost, so the extra power from turbocharging is almost totally available to power the vehicle; and second, the 15 psi of boost in the induction system actually helps push the pistons down on the intake stroke whereas the intake stroke created a pumping loss (negative torque) when the engine was normally aspirated. Now you may be thinking that the turbochargers create exhaust backpressure that increases the pumping loss on the exhaust stroke, but let’s go back to the first sentence of this discussion — we’re talking about a “properly engineered” system. That means the exhaust restriction created by the dual turbos will be minor, and that boost pressure will always exceed exhaust system backpressure. Simply translated, in terms of performance, a good twin-turbo 350 V8 will turn your inside out! Okay, just for fun, let’s compare our 350 twin-turbo V8 at 15-psi boost to a 120-cubic-inch compact four cylinder running 30 psi of boost — twice that of the V8. By our rule of thumb, the little four-banger will now be flowing air equivalent to a 360-cubic-inch normally aspirated engine. That’s impressive for a small engine, but it will still have only half the power potential of our twin-turbo V8 running at half the boost. If you push the V8 to 30-psi boost, you’ll have the equivalent of 1050 cubic inches and over 1500 hp, if it is done correctly. [SIZE="5"]Turbocharging is fun. It’s addictive.[/SIZE] [url=http://advancedperformancetuning.blogspot.com/2011/04/turbo-v8-facts-of-life.html]Advanced Performance Tuning: Turbo V8 Facts of Life[/url] [/QUOTE]
Insert quotes…
Verification
Post reply
The Marketplace Latest
Honda city JSracing gtwing spoiler
Started by
jeff6126
Exterior and Body
Honda civic fd ~car spray(Ferrari red)
Started by
jeff6126
Exterior and Body
Honda jazz fit gk flrs body kit
Started by
jeff6126
Exterior and Body
BMW F10 ~M5 front skirt lip with glossy black
Started by
jeff6126
Exterior and Body
Kia Forte gtwing spoiler
Started by
jeff6126
Exterior and Body
BMW F30 M3 front skirt lip
Started by
jeff6126
Exterior and Body
Proton Saga VVT Evo Front Bonnet Hood
Started by
jeff6126
Exterior and Body
Perodua bezza gear up body kit/spoiler
Started by
jeff6126
Exterior and Body
BMW F10 ~M5 front bumper set ~M5 kidney grille...
Started by
jeff6126
Exterior and Body
BMW f30 mad style front skirt lip
Started by
jeff6126
Exterior and Body
Posts refresh every 5 minutes
Babes: A1GP Malaysia 2007 - Sepang Circuit
Flag
So the...
Everone can enjoy Dual-Clutch Tranny soon
Dual-clutch transmissions have so far been primarily restricted to cars from the VW group or expensive sports and luxury cars, with little...
GRA Autocross/Gymkhana
Registration has begun for the GRA autocross.
For more info and the Rules & Regulations, please go to
Welcome to grassracingautosports.com
.
:regular_smile:
Recent Posts
Darker Design : Mercedes-Benz Launches GLA Nightfall Edition in Malaysia
Started by
The_Mechanic
News and Features
Honda Malaysia Doubles Down on Hybrids: New CR-V Launches with Dual e:HEV...
Started by
The_Mechanic
News and Features
BateriHub Reaches 200-Store Milestone, Becomes Malaysia’s Largest...
Started by
The_Mechanic
News and Features
Been stalking for 3 years edy
Started by
dheepadarshan95
Introduction and Newbies
Recommendation: Turbocharger for 4B11 N.A engine
Started by
Mitevo7
Car Modification
Search
Online now
Enjoying Zerotohundred?
Log-in
for an ad-less experience
Home
Forums
Main Forums
Car Talk
Forced Induction & Engine Management
V8 Turbo Lover