turbofabricator
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Mar 7, 2004
- Messages
- 4,261
Then just turn the NITROUS up instead??

By registering with us, you'll be able to discuss, share and private message with other members of our community.
SignUp Now!Now you're talkin'! That's still an option with the afterburner side of the system.Then just turn the NITROUS up instead??![]()
Interesting. The wheels are turning.Liquid nitrogen is just plain TOO cold unless you only race in Arizona or New Mexico. Any humidity will freeze up the intercooler solid. I use liquid nitrogen frequently and have to suit up in protective gear so it doesn't burn instantly. I've immersed ripe bannanas in it and after a few seconds pull it out and throw it on the floor and it SHATTERS in a bazillion pieces. (DON'T do that! The mess is AWFUL to clean up a few minutes later. GOO everywhere!) We've frozen all kinds of interesting stuff. But I'm gonna claim the fifth on this issue, though.CO2 or nitrous would be a better choice. Jim D'Alesandro use to use CO2 on his intercooler. It made a TON of power. (it picked up his 60 ft. times a BUNCH!!!!!
Especially when the CO2 vapor caused to beams to stay lit until the rear tires blew it away and it started the timers.
![]()
I'm going to make the Y pipe at the turbine housing simple and open. No separating of the cylinder banks. The only advantage to separating the banks would be spool up time. With the nitrous, I don't need to concern myself with that. I'd rather give the exhaust flow from either bank as much turbine area as possible to escape as quickly as possible, rather than take the chance that separating the banks at the Y pipe will create an exhaust restriction at the turbine housing.Running the single turbo, the exhaust collectors are going to join at a Y pipe right at the turbo. With a V6 configuration, it might be advantageous to put a wall in the Y pipe to split it so that each bank of cylinders is separated. I'm already running a split turbine housing.
Valve events are happening every 120 degrees of crankshaft rotation. The cylinder firings are bank to bank. That means an exhaust pulse is created, bank to bank every 120 degrees. As a piston is beginning to pump exhaust gases from one cylinder, the exhaust valve is opening on another cylinder on the opposite bank of cylinders. How does that new exhaust pulse affect the other cylinder on the other bank that is about 60+ degrees ABDC into pumping the exhaust gases out of it?
Dusty. I thought you preferred twin turbos? A single turbo? Why?Here's an example of the downswept I built for my big block.View attachment 156004
Dusty. I thought you preferred twin turbos? A single turbo? Why?
How much power do you think it takes to do 1.23-1.24s in the 60 with a 3300lb car and 10.5w tires?Because a single can make 2400 and that's all I want. If I ever want 3000 I'll swap to twins.
Other issues that keep me with the single. Cost, weight. Another turbo is another 70lbs on the nose of an already heavy car. My focus now is not on more power, but more chassis. I couldn't use anywhere near the power I could make with my old chassis set-up. I can now weigh 3250 so I was over 200# heavy for my class. I need to go 1.17-1.22 60' times and doing this at 3450# isn't easy. So rather than spending money on power I'm getting it down to weight. I need to go something like 1.18-3.08-4.50 at 165. So getting the chassis to handle the power early in the run is the goal.
Dusty - do you datalog acceleration (g's) in Alan's car? If so, what does it look like through the 60'.