» Site Navigation | | » Recent Threads | | | | | | | 09-09-2011, 03:28 PM | #91 | Senior Member Join Date: Dec 2007 Location: Gulfport, Florida Posts: 3,208 | Quote: Originally Posted by angus In the interest of making this kit easy to install, I am going to test having the oil drain go into the drain bolt as it is done on the GReddy turbo kit for the H22 prelude - this uses a banjo bolt to drain back into the pan at the drain plug, it works because the hose will only fill with oil up to the oil level in the pan, thus the part of the drain hose that is above the level of oil in the pan will be empty, allowing the turbo to drain. Years ago when GReddy started doing this I debated how it would work, but it has long since been proven so I will test it on the ti. | Excellent idea that I considered but without the "banjo" fitting. I was going to modify a oil plug but that would be a pain every oil change. The Banjo is a perfect solution. This would also take away the upward curve in my turbo oil dump. Please PM me the parts numbers when you figure it out and I will test it on my car immediately and report back. | | | 09-09-2011, 05:53 PM | #92 | Member Join Date: Jun 2011 Location: VAN Posts: 71 | Quote: Originally Posted by xxxJohnBoyxxx Excellent idea that I considered but without the "banjo" fitting. I was going to modify a oil plug but that would be a pain every oil change. The Banjo is a perfect solution. This would also take away the upward curve in my turbo oil dump. Please PM me the parts numbers when you figure it out and I will test it on my car immediately and report back. | Yes John, since simple and easy to install is the objective here, I think this will be the way to go - I will see what I can dig up. | | | 09-09-2011, 07:33 PM | #93 | Senior Member Join Date: Nov 2009 Location: Elkhart, IN Posts: 128 | Way to go guys. Good solution it seems. Hope to see it work. How will the flow be tested? Just wait to see if oil spews thru the bearings? | | | 09-09-2011, 11:58 PM | #94 | Senior Member Join Date: Dec 2007 Location: Gulfport, Florida Posts: 3,208 | Quote: Originally Posted by signature sound Way to go guys. Good solution it seems. Hope to see it work. How will the flow be tested? Just wait to see if oil spews thru the bearings? | If the car smokes like it is burning oil there is oil leaking past the turbo seals. I know exactly what it looks like from when my scavenger pump went bad and also when I had the turbo oil dump hose oriented wrong and oil was backing up in the turbo. The boost pipe also gets a nice oil film in it when the oil dump is not correct on a turbo. | | | 09-11-2011, 05:44 AM | #95 | Member Join Date: Jun 2011 Location: VAN Posts: 71 | Well there is a little more to it than that, while it is true that you could just see if it smokes, I prefer to test these things. I usually test the oil volume exiting the cartridge, then we will know if there is: a) enough oil or b) too much oil and require a restrictor (or smaller one) Second is that I would temporarily use a clear hose to actually see if the drain is backing up on the turbo. As I said the setup has been long since proven to work on the H22 (also a "slant" motor) Last edited by angus; 11-28-2011 at 09:00 PM. | | | 09-11-2011, 03:07 PM | #96 | Senior Member Join Date: Dec 2007 Location: Gulfport, Florida Posts: 3,208 | Quote: Originally Posted by angus Well there is a little more to it than that, while it is true that you caould just see if it smokes, I prefer to test these things. I usually test the oil volume exiting the cartridge, then we will know if there is: a) enough oil or b) too much oil and require a restrictor (or smaller one) Second is that I would temporarily use a clear hose to actually see if the drain is backing up on the turbo. As I said the setup has been long since proven to work on the H22 (also a "slant" motor) | I run 90psi cold and 60+psi oil pressure hot with no restrictor bung. Think that is too much? No leaks and cheap EBay turbo | | | 09-12-2011, 06:11 AM | #97 | Senior Member Join Date: Mar 2005 Location: Portland Or Posts: 2,666 | A turbo road race car I worked on I had to upsize the drain hose from 1/2 to #12 aeroquipe to handle the drain. If you let the drain hose drain to a bucket its not oil its oil foam coming out, the foam backs up easily. It does not have to smoke, until it fails.... I would try and come up with a above the oil drain, it allows the natural vacume in the crankcase to help scavenge the oil. It likely depends on how the car is intended to be run as well, most turbo cars don't regularly run at flat out full speed for a half hour straight... I know that air research used to say more turbos were ruined by over oiling than under oiling. Dave __________________ Dave - PDX 1995 318ti - Active Black and Tan. 2005 330xi - Mtech 1 - 6spd - Orient Blue/Black | | | 09-12-2011, 08:32 PM | #98 | Senior Member Join Date: Jul 2011 Location: Northern VA Posts: 132 | Great idea would be very interested if it works out | | | 09-18-2011, 08:00 AM | #99 | Member Join Date: Jun 2011 Location: VAN Posts: 71 | I think the idea here is to control the oil flow into the turbo - manufacturers like greddy will spec the turbo with an orifice that is appropriate for the application when building a kit. This way you will not need an oversize drain or need to rely on crankcase scavenging to drain the turbo properly. The drain plug oil line obviously works, and sure makes it easy for DIY'ers - this is a big plus for my kit. Last edited by angus; 09-18-2011 at 08:03 AM. | | | 09-18-2011, 04:30 PM | #100 | Senior Member Join Date: Mar 2005 Location: Portland Or Posts: 2,666 | The race car I was referring too had the problem stock (And it had a metering pill). I think it really had a lot to do with time spent at high rpm, we were keeping the car up near 5000 pretty much continuously and in the corners the oil would pile up against the drain, the factory drain hose also had a sharp bend in it. so multiple oddities were linked to the issues we had. I've worked on a quite a few turbo engines, and I've never seen one drain straight to liquid, some even have a baffle can to allow the foam to disperse. Not saying it wont work ,, just that its not the usual trick. With a metering orifice I could see it dropping the volume, that may be the whole fix. Incidentally if yhou need metered orifices, check dirt track suppliers for Mechanical injection fuel pills, they are nice little brass pieces with very accurately drilled hols in a extremely broad range of sizes. Good Luck! Dave __________________ Dave - PDX 1995 318ti - Active Black and Tan. 2005 330xi - Mtech 1 - 6spd - Orient Blue/Black Last edited by pdxmotorhead; 09-18-2011 at 04:32 PM. | | | 11-10-2011, 03:26 AM | #101 | Member Join Date: Jul 2011 Location: Garner, NC Posts: 31 | when is this kit gonna be available? i want it! :P | | | 11-10-2011, 04:24 AM | #102 | Senior Member Join Date: Jan 2005 Location: Louisiana Posts: 1,093 | Quote: Originally Posted by npagan2 when is this kit gonna be available? i want it! :P | X2 ! __________________ was the 1 an only Bagged Ti on 19's!! | | | 11-16-2011, 03:57 AM | #103 | Member Join Date: May 2010 Location: CA Posts: 95 | Well? Santa's gonna be doing his rounds soon. Will he be dropping turbo's down the chimney?... or coal? | | | 11-28-2011, 04:32 AM | #104 | Senior Member Join Date: Jan 2005 Location: Louisiana Posts: 1,093 | So Is the thread dead ? There is no turbo kit ? __________________ was the 1 an only Bagged Ti on 19's!! | | | 11-28-2011, 04:52 AM | #105 | Senior Member Join Date: Oct 2011 Location: Lancaster, PA Posts: 295 | "ANGUS," please do this, it would be awesome, id be super interested in a plug and play turbo with a gain like that, that **** would be killer!! __________________ Aerodynamics are for those who can not build engines | | | | | Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests) | | Posting Rules | You may not post new threads You may not post replies You may not post attachments You may not edit your posts HTML code is Off | | | |