Yeah, temperature drop usually goes hand in hand with a pressure drop. It may make tuning a little tricky if an EGT sensor is in that big expansion. Maybe not, but that would defy the world we live in. A sudden creation of condensation is another side affect. Thats what goes on with those condensation clouds you see bursting behind a fighter jet....not that this has much to do with anything here though. I was actually making the comment about the temp drop with expansions, and someone came at me with something along the lines of, 'physics dont apply to turbo buicks'. I also mentioned the greatly increased amount of surface area which may affect temps....but that would just be an issue with the temp of the surface of the DP, not the temps inside. The temps inside would cool down because of the expansion.
A pipe that necks down is not called an expansion pipe, btw. For the guy who said this
"I just love all the guys running stock turbo and PT44 who have so much knowlege of racing engines."
My combo is not the result of my knowledge and experience. Its mostly what the car had when i bought it, and Ive spent money fixing things that were wrong with it, rather than flushing 10 G's into going all out. I would rather spend my money on my house.
Isnt it called a PTE-44, a derivative of the TE-44?
I know alot about racing engines because I machined and built thousands of them in my engine days. (quit that work about 8 years ago cause it didnt pay)
Ever watch a nascar/winston west race on TV (CBS or another huge network), and the guy kicking everyones ass has an engine under his hood that you did all the block work on( a ton on these engines), and the head work? Ever go to willow springs as part of a top sportsman crew team, and the 6 leading cars all have engines you did alot of the work on? Ever go to an NHRA race and see several cars running your engines? Built engines for SCORE, MSRA, SCTA, SCCA, IMSA, NHRA, NASCAR, IHBA, IRRA, VARA, SCRA, APBA to name a few. Remember the beginning of the turbo import scene in the early 90's with these guys pulling 450whp out of a 1.8 liter motor that you did all the block work on, and the porting,/machining of the heads? Ever have car craft, hot rod and engine masters do monthly articles on engines built where you work? They still do...JMS racing engines.
I can keep going but whats the point. Someone who probably hasnt even rebuilt a VW engine is questioning my experience.
I dont know **** about transmissions, so you wont se me arguing with anyone about that. I do know a bit about engine building, and my experience is not limited to a "PT44 turbo buick". By the time I was 18, I had owned a 63 Nova, a 64 Nova, a 72 Vega with a SBC, a 70 cougar with a 4V 351 cleveland built to the ceiling, a 67 cougar....It didnt stop there. Did my first valve job when I was 12 and built my first see through, rotating and firing (LED's) model engine when I was 5. I was one of the first ones out there playing with the C headed cobra's, and developed intake manifolds that spoke for themselves. People across the country still consider me "the king" of these intakes. Go to corral.net and do a user name search on 32VHEMIJR, and the search word, "intake". Search in the SVT/DOHC forum. I'm no expert on turbos, but I have developed a feeling over time for what goes and what doesnt on an engine. Having a DTS dyno screaming all day 5 days a week for years in your face gives you a little insight. This is a stupid argument anyway....The people who think this DP is awesome need to go buy one of these 5" DP's, throw it on their car and test it.
I said since the beginning that RJC makes awesome products and I thought they were top notch. Ragging on someone who questions something is not the only way to prove a product.