I have drilled one in the back of the pan before. Marked out a spot that was high and didn't interfere with the pan bolts, then took the pan off and did all the work. I will try and get a pic today.
This isnt a cummins, im not sure if you are trying to throw around turbo knowledge to build yourself up, but its not going to transfer over "directly". Sizing a turbo setup for a duramax is a bit different than sizing a turbo setup for a cummins. Mainly because we dont have a 70's technology boat-anchor of a head like the cummins does. Why do you think all these stock-head/cam 750hp cummins's are getting 70psi of boost crammed into them when you can make 750hp on a duramax running almost 30 psi less worth of boost. Its because our intake tract and heads actually flow decently.
(ok now im sure you're going to have 100 instances of "my buddy billy-joe-jim-bob's cummins makes 700hp running only 50psi, but whatever, you get my point)
With this setup Kyle is building, I bet he wont make much more than 50psi. Thats just coming from experience of building several duramax twin turbo setups using similarly-sized turbos. I built a big 366/480-race-cover setup for a customer a while back...his truck is a cc/sb lifted on 35's and runs 11's at over 120mph...so its making some power. Built motor, injectors, dual CP3's. When I was road testing the setup on the race tune, I never saw more than ~57psi.
I hope you have a wastegate on the hot pipe.
The last setup I made for my truck was a 480/1.32 over a stock LLY variable vane turbo. I didnt really notice any additional lag over the stock turbo/S475 twin setups ive built/driven. Again, its cummins vs. duramax air flow...Tuning of the rail pressure and turbo vane position tables plays a little part in this though.
Ben
Would like to see the flow sheets to prove that! A highly modified cummins head agaist a stock dmax head has a hard time beating it. But a modified dmax vs mod cummin no way. Would like to see. U cummin guys crack me up. Even if it did could never own one, I have enough scrap layin around the shop. Doesn't a dmax head flow 300% more or some god awful huge difference then a cummins to start with?
The duramax does has a better head design, as it should its a bigger engine.
Not that I know anything, but I'll go out on a limb here. One would think (or me atleast) that the cummins should have the higher flowing head other than the rpms they see. Just because theres a .7 liter difference doesn't mean anything. each head on the duramax only has to feed 4 cylinders, which are smaller chambers vs. the 6 cylinder of the cummins. Sorry if it feels like abunch of us are ganging up on you now lol. I just wanted to comment though, not picking on the dodge guy :thumb:
The duramax has two piece design, actually is a pretty cool design, acts like a windage scraper and baffle.
No i'm slacking. Been procrastinating on drilling the oil pan, so i built a frame for my 31 Chevy then put the body back together. Once i'm able to get that out of the garage i'll be able to pull this in and do the pan, really don't feel like laying in the rocks.