After reading Trents thread I just can't wrap my brain around this. Unless I'm miss reading something how does a setup like this equal to lower DP and boost but more power? Or is all of that just speculation at this point?
\ So if the pressure at the intake of the turbo is 100 PSI and the output is 130 PSI, it is exactly the same to the turbo as if it was 0 PSI at the intake and the output was 30PSI.
Not true.......
Turbos work on pressure ratio. If an atmosphere turbo is being fed atmospheric pressure of 14.5 psi (this assumes there is no restriction in the intake and sea level) and is showing 30 psi on a guage, it is working at approximately a 3:1 pressure ratio, (30+14.5)/14.5=3.07. If you are feeding another turbo with that turbo, you will have 44.5 psi on the inlet of the turbo. In order for it to be the same pressure ratio, it would need to be putting out 133.5 psi or 119 on a gauge.well I like to learn, so instead of saying not true, just correct me. Were adults here........sometimes
Turbos work on pressure ratio. If an atmosphere turbo is being fed atmospheric pressure of 14.5 psi (this assumes there is no restriction in the intake and sea level) and is showing 30 psi on a guage, it is working at approximately a 3:1 pressure ratio, (30+14.5)/14.5=3.07. If you are feeding another turbo with that turbo, you will have 44.5 psi on the inlet of the turbo. In order for it to be the same pressure ratio, it would need to be putting out 133.5 psi or 119 on a gauge.
Here are my thoughts on parallel turbos, right or wrong. When you compound turbos, you lose some efficiency. Running them in parallel allows you to get the same amount of air and efficiency of a large single but with quicker spool up. The only problem is that since diesels run at such a low RPM, it is harder for them to take in air (remember an engine is an air pump). Running compounds allows you to build more boost pressure which forces more air into the engine in a shorter amount of time. I think heads and cams will be more important with parallel twins that they are with compound twins.
When you compound turbos, you lose some efficiency.
I could be wrong in this, but here's the way I look at it. Say your turbos have 85% efficiency. Your first stage is giving 85% of what is possible, then when it goes to the second stage gives you 85% of the original 85% making it only 72% of the original potential. I think the reason it isn't much of a problem is because the primary turbo is so large and the boost pressures are so high, you get a bunch of air. Look at what kind of power range you run with a single compared to a compound setup with a comparable size primary. You don't run into problems with compound efficiency until you really push them. A good example is a stock turbo twin setup using an S475 or GT4202 as the primary in a compound setup compared to how they do in a single setup. They are getting pushed really hard when you get up above 700 HP in a compound setup, but as a single, they are good up to about 800 if you have the fuel to drive it. It is easier to make power with compounds with cooler EGTs, but you have to oversize them.Would you expand uppon that statement some josh? I was under the impression that they were very efficient when sized properly, hence the very manageable EGTs and whatnot. I suppose that each turbo as a unit itself could be less efficient in a compound setup, but the two combined are gennerally more efficient than each on its own when run inside the design parameters of the set. Or am i blatantly missing something obvious? LOL!
For the most part, I agree with you on the parallel turbo stuff.Think about whats the advantage of running twin parrallel turbos over a single? Almost none, besides the fact you can say you have twins under the hood. There are some slightly spool-up improvements running twins in parallel, but all the extra air tubing under the hood would be a night mare.
Most twin turbo sequential turbo trucks, don't run 130psi, unless they have the wrong turbos. I shoot for 70-80psi of boost. The biggest beneift to twins, is you can cram more mass flow into a smaller turbo, and still have decent spool-ups. My best twins set-up to date is a GT3582R over a S478LI. Wicked fast spool-up, almost gaser like. Pulls hard to 80psi. Drive pressure is balanced with boost. Egts for stockish trucks are typically under 1300 deg's. :woott:
I could be wrong in this, but here's the way I look at it. Say your turbos have 85% efficiency. Your first stage is giving 85% of what is possible, then when it goes to the second stage gives you 85% of the original 85% making it only 72% of the original potential. I think the reason it isn't much of a problem is because the primary turbo is so large and the boost pressures are so high, you get a bunch of air. Look at what kind of power range you run with a single compared to a compound setup with a comparable size primary. You don't run into problems with compound efficiency until you really push them. A good example is a stock turbo twin setup using an S475 or GT4202 as the primary in a compound setup compared to how they do in a single setup. They are getting pushed really hard when you get up above 700 HP in a compound setup, but as a single, they are good up to about 800 if you have the fuel to drive it. It is easier to make power with compounds with cooler EGTs, but you have to oversize them.
Think about whats the advantage of running twin parrallel turbos over a single? Almost none, besides the fact you can say you have twins under the hood. There are some slightly spool-up improvements running twins in parallel, but all the extra air tubing under the hood would be a night mare.
Most twin turbo sequential turbo trucks, don't run 130psi, unless they have the wrong turbos. I shoot for 70-80psi of boost. The biggest beneift to twins, is you can cram more mass flow into a smaller turbo, and still have decent spool-ups. My best twins set-up to date is a GT3582R over a S478LI. Wicked fast spool-up, almost gaser like. Pulls hard to 80psi. Drive pressure is balanced with boost. Egts for stockish trucks are typically under 1300 deg's. :woott:
If this helps at all..
Parallel both turbos are pulling air from the atmosphere and dumping it together to the engine, one does not feed the other. Every twin gasser I know if is parallel. Most of the diesel “twins” are really sequential setups. Just as a single turbo crams more air into a set space (6.6L) a sequential setup as a turbo cramming more air into the intake of the second turbo. Think of it as the most awesome ram air intake ever. Now a turbo MAP only cares about how much the CHANGE in pressure over the compressor is. So if the pressure at the intake of the turbo is 100 PSI and the output is 130 PSI, it is exactly the same to the turbo as if it was 0 PSI at the intake and the output was 30PSI. (but the boot holding the output tube on would care!!!) That is why you can get so much boost out of a sequential setup..
The benefit of a sequential setup over a big single is you still have the primary turbo that is small, and will spool quicker and much smother. So let’s say you do a S475 over stock, your truck will spool the same on the bottom end as stock, only once the stocker is spooled up the S475 will be lighting and it will keep boosting