How about a vacuum accumulator on a 3 port solenoid valve, you feed manifold pressure to the BOV like normal. but have the solenoid valve switch when you want and feed the vacume to the BOV just like how it normaly works... and bam your BOV opens up... and your car idling will charge the vacuum accumulator.
just a idea.
i have this same problem but with a 600whp 4cly nissan with a ford C4.. i was using a small spool up shot on the t-break.
That sounds like a good idea if you really need the BOV to open that far.
In my case, I need a certain level of boost to build to push the stall on a tight torque converter. Controlling how much the BOV opens allows some control of the amount of boost that is building during staging.
On the last pass of the recent track testing session, during the new staging routine, the rpm rose to 4550-4650 rpm after going WOT and on the nitrous, and leveled out at that rpm range while the map rose to 165 kPa. The map level was still on a climb when I released the transbrake and in doing so also switched the BOV control to manifold. The aux channel of the boost controller that was feeding CO2 to the BOV during staging was set at a control pressure target of 2 psi.
I'm performing some testing in the shop tomorrow in an effort to adjust the map level during staging to 175 kPa. The nitrous is set to shut off at 175 kPa, so the nitrous system may be the control factor that keeps the map at 175 during staging. If the map drops below 175 kPa before the launch can occur, the nitrous will come back on and push the map back up above 175 kPa. Kinda like a 2 step, but instead of timing being retarded, or cylinders being dropped, the nitrous cycles on and off.
At this point in the tuning involving the 91mm turbo, this is the highest amount of boost I've been able to build at 4,600 rpm. 165 kPa MAP and still rising.
With the best previous tune, at 4,600 rpm, I was only able to build around 110 kPa.