i would like to hear it on the pickup.
do a search on youtube, there are plenty of vids on there
i would like to hear it on the pickup.
Dont worry, I'm pretty sure the charger on my Buick cost me far more than most do for our trucks....at least its more than a 4204R
I meant on Tim Z's pickup.
it only has to happen once and boom! any ways i would not worry about it since i see you have twins. i came to the conclusion that without it, you chop the throttle and bark. the turbo spins at over 100,000 rpm, and when you bark it, it stalls the turbo (stops), and starts spinning in the opposite direction. the the wheels can and sometimes do touch the compressor or exhaust hsgs. you have exhaust flow spinning the turbine one direction, and the boost psi built up in the intake that is coming back into the compressor hsg thus spinning the comp wheel in the wrong direction. this is hard on the turbo wheels and the shaft (when the wheels want to spin in the opposite direction of each other on the shaft. most or all exhaust wheels are friction welded to the shaft ( like intake or exhaust valves in cylinder heads)How did you come to this conclusion? Sounds more like a manufacturing defect to me. If barking a new turbo for 10 min breaks shafts I think we would see far more failures.
it only has to happen once and boom! any ways i would not worry about it since i see you have twins. i came to the conclusion that without it, you chop the throttle and bark. the turbo spins at over 100,000 rpm, and when you bark it, it stalls the turbo (stops), and starts spinning in the opposite direction. you have exhaust flow spinning the turbine one direction, and the boost psi built up in the intake that is coming back into the compressor hsg thus spinning the comp wheel in the wrong direction. this is hard on the turbo wheels and the shaft (when the wheels want to spin in the opposite direction of each other on the shaft. most or all exhaust wheels are friction welded to the shaft (like like intake or exhaust valves in cylinder heads)
Dodge cummins turbo barks alot when modded but I don't hear of those trucks blowing turbos??? Why?
What I have on my truck has little to do with it as I play with others trucks far more than I do my own. But what makes you thinks twins are irrelivent? I can stall my turbo(s) with twins.
As I said its far more likely there was a defect in the turbo. Most people can stall their turbos hundreds if not thousands of times with no problems.
Not true. Every truck Ive swapped turbos on that was beaten on and barked was in way worse shape. My own, and reeces turbos were not fine at all. They were f'd. Now on my other buddies truck who is nice to it, his turbo was fine. Ive seen lots of IHIs that looked and felt like they were ready to come apart. Now Im aware this isnt just from barking it, but I do feel like its a factor. My truck personally was barked a ton, and only saw 27PSI a handful of times. Like I said for a street truck driven on a budget a BOV is nice especially if you live where there are mountains
Not true. Every truck Ive swapped turbos on that was beaten on and barked was in way worse shape. My own, and reeces turbos were not fine at all. They were f'd. Now on my other buddies truck who is nice to it, his turbo was fine. Ive seen lots of IHIs that looked and felt like they were ready to come apart. Now Im aware this isnt just from barking it, but I do feel like its a factor. My truck personally was barked a ton, and only saw 27PSI a handful of times. Like I said for a street truck driven on a budget a BOV is nice especially if you live where there are mountains
happens all the time! the industrial injection turbo i mentioned blew up was on a cummins 12v. pulling trucks are supposed to have 2 cross bolts in the down pipe to prevent the exhaust wheels from flying out the exhaust and killing someoneDodge cummins turbo barks alot when modded but I don't hear of those trucks blowing turbos??? Why?
Did you buy your truck new? What about your friends? Is it possible anything went through the intake at one point or another. Do you have any data to back your claim of turbo failure due to turbo bark? If yes, why is it now just coming out that your turbo and your friends turbo were junk because of turbo bark? Also, is it possible that too much fuel caused your turbo to become junk?
Never claimed failure. Buddies truck was new. 2700ms isn't too much fuel. Point was barking was the common factor in a few trucks. That's all. Also something in the intake would cause damage to the fins. Which all were fine and in normal shapeDid you buy your truck new? What about your friends? Is it possible anything went through the intake at one point or another. Do you have any data to back your claim of turbo failure due to turbo bark? If yes, why is it now just coming out that your turbo and your friends turbo were junk because of turbo bark? Also, is it possible that too much fuel caused your turbo to become junk?
x2If some folks think barking is no biggy, than so be it. I however chose to TRY to protect mine to what ever degree I can. Maybe we should bring this up. "Is the blowoff hurting the turbo or helping reduce RPM reversal in them (which can't be a friend to them)?" I like full coverage insurance myself. To each his own.