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Eh, I think 200 tw tires is overkill for third gear pulls, logs start at 3k RPMs. Firehawk Indy 500s are 340 tw and I can do 3rd all day with the completed e30 tune, just make sure the tires are warm by driving around for a bit.
I’m running Indy 500s and I get pretty serious wheel spin on most 3rd gear pulls. I’m not smoking the tires but it’s enough to throw off the logs at least.
I’m running Indy 500s and I get pretty serious wheel spin on most 3rd gear pulls. I’m not smoking the tires but it’s enough to throw off the logs at least.
the discussion is interesting
a different angle is there are far more hybrid and GTX failures I've handled over the years compared to the S280
there is not a single turbo of any kind that has zero failures, the S280 after hundreds and hundreds sold + in use has the best record for reliability and performance period
the WGA is simple
stock fuel system = supplied WGA
anything fuel related above stock, XDI-meth-aux upgrade the WGA
the discussion is interesting
a different angle is there are far more hybrid and GTX failures I've handled over the years compared to the S280
there is not a single turbo of any kind that has zero failures, the S280 after hundreds and hundreds sold / in use has the best record for reliability and performance period
the WGA is simple
stock fuel system = supplied WGA
anthing above stock, XDI-meth-aux upgrwde the WGA
I'd also throw in that at high elevation the wastegate upgrade is worth it, we can run more boost without leaning out since the oxygen density is lower. I'm running 28psi on stock fuel system at 5000+ ft elevation on E30 and have a solid 12.5afr. While tuning on 91 octane I had a map come back at 31psi and just then the AFR started leaning out into the high 12s
I’ll give this a shot! I always thought it was weird that the factory called for crazy high tire pressure on such a small, light car. You run 27 front and rear?
I’ll give this a shot! I always thought it was weird that the factory called for crazy high tire pressure on such a small, light car. You run 27 front and rear?
I'd also throw in that at high elevation the wastegate upgrade is worth it, we can run more boost without leaning out since the oxygen density is lower. I'm running 28psi on stock fuel system at 5000+ ft elevation on E30 and have a solid 12.5afr. While tuning on 91 octane I had a map come back at 31psi and just then the AFR started leaning out into the high 12s
I think a base map would be acceptable because they tend to over-do fuel and keep boost at absolute minimum. I wouldn't just run a lower boost map since the fuel is probably optimized for the lower boost and while it might be safe it's probably not optimal. How much power you lose will depend on fuel and boost and how rich it goes
I think a base map would be acceptable because they tend to over-do fuel and keep boost at absolute minimum. I wouldn't just run a lower boost map since the fuel is probably optimized for the lower boost and while it might be safe it's probably not optimal. How much power you lose will depend on fuel and boost and how rich it goes
It wasn't a parameter being monitored on the AP at the time of failure. However during tuning we were seeing over a solid 25psi from 4000-6700rpm, and from 3200 to 3900 rpm a solid 24psi.
I am sure the turbo "can handle it" but I am also sure that it isn't designed to do that for 20 minutes at a time.
I think you could get away with the supplied actuator on thr stock fuel system just fine. You won't push more then 26psi sustained up top really anyhow. Anyrhing over that boost level it will struggle to hold boost up top.
I'm leaning towards B, it is designed to not overspin the turbo and at the same time limits the output of holding higher boost until redline. To each their own though, I don't expect everyone to do what Ron / Adam says nor do I expect people to do the opposite.
Speaking of the actuator, what's the best way to preload it?
With limited research, it seems like the suggested method is all over the place, from 3mm or 4mm, from 2 full (360°) turns, to 4 full turns, and anything in between.
What did you guys do? I really prefer to do it right once with the turbo outside of the car, than have to tinker with it once the turbo is in the car.
The S280 also doesn't use a nut like the stock/hybrid turbo, so I'm not sure if turning the nut 3 full turns is applicable here.
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