Boost Problems
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From: Somewhere in Kent, sniffing some V-Power
I have just fitted a twin dump decat downpipe to my sti4. Before this, my boost gauge registered 1.4 then down to 1.2 at max revs.
It is now reading 1.6bar and 1.4/5 bar and max revs.
Is this going to cause damage to my engine/turbo? And if so, how to fix it?
Cheers guys
It is now reading 1.6bar and 1.4/5 bar and max revs.
Is this going to cause damage to my engine/turbo? And if so, how to fix it?
Cheers guys
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From: Somewhere in Kent, sniffing some V-Power
Originally Posted by chrispurvis100
I have just fitted a twin dump decat downpipe to my sti4. Before this, my boost gauge registered 1.4 then down to 1.2 at max revs.
It is now reading 1.6bar and 1.4/5 bar and max revs.
Is this going to cause damage to my engine/turbo? And if so, how to fix it?
Cheers guys
It is now reading 1.6bar and 1.4/5 bar and max revs.
Is this going to cause damage to my engine/turbo? And if so, how to fix it?
Cheers guys
Yes it will likely cause damage. I would run it at about 1 bar unless you have checked for knock and fuelling - ie knocklink or det cans and wideband lambda.
You can play with restrictors to adjust the boost. On your model year I think you need to increase the bore of the restrictor in 0.1mm steps to reduce boost. Get a set of fine drills from Maplin or similar, and don't use so much throttle that you ever go over 1 bar again until you've done it. I'm surprised you aren't cringing in the cabin from the really obvious detonation this is likely to be producing. Ouch, that could blow up the car in a few miles of hard driving. This all assuming standard ECU.
You can play with restrictors to adjust the boost. On your model year I think you need to increase the bore of the restrictor in 0.1mm steps to reduce boost. Get a set of fine drills from Maplin or similar, and don't use so much throttle that you ever go over 1 bar again until you've done it. I'm surprised you aren't cringing in the cabin from the really obvious detonation this is likely to be producing. Ouch, that could blow up the car in a few miles of hard driving. This all assuming standard ECU.
I recently had the same problem after fitting a twin dump downpipe. Tried to cure the creep with dawes and AVCR but no joy. I was told on here that the twin dump was causing the problem. I re-fitted the cat downpipe and problem solved, no more creep. I have just sold that pipe and purchashed an open neck pipe which so I am lead to believe will not cause the same issues.
Apprently it has something to do with the wastegate gasses interupting the flow.
Apprently it has something to do with the wastegate gasses interupting the flow.
I saw this once with a VF24 on an STi as well. Yet on other cars it has been fine. Easy way to tell if you have real boost creep is to disconnect the wastegate flapper. You should get no boost anywhere. I don't mean the actuator's pneumatic feed, that would give you way too much boost.
Originally Posted by john banks
I saw this once with a VF24 on an STi as well. Yet on other cars it has been fine. Easy way to tell if you have real boost creep is to disconnect the wastegate flapper. You should get no boost anywhere. I don't mean the actuator's pneumatic feed, that would give you way too much boost.
I ran a 96 UK car before with a TD05 and twin dump but that was fine.
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I've got boost creep on my 22b which has a VF23 and bpm twin dump. But AndyF mapped my AVC-R to keep it under control so it peaks where I wanted, at 1.3bar.
He mentioned cutting the splitter out of the DP may help the problem. If that doesn't work then he said porting the wastegate would resolve it.
From what I know, its due to the design of the twin dumps which does not allow the wastegate gases to flow efficiently, this makes the turbo boost 'creep' passed the level set as the wastegate can't dump enough air to stop it.
Dave.
He mentioned cutting the splitter out of the DP may help the problem. If that doesn't work then he said porting the wastegate would resolve it.
From what I know, its due to the design of the twin dumps which does not allow the wastegate gases to flow efficiently, this makes the turbo boost 'creep' passed the level set as the wastegate can't dump enough air to stop it.
Dave.
Last edited by DaveW; Oct 28, 2004 at 09:15 AM.
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will a boost controller not help you on this either manual or electric
