Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Does boost build up quicker in say 1st gear and with a slightly larger spike than compared with in 4th gear?

My boost controller is set up at 12psi and on the dyno in 4th gear it shows somethin like 12.5psi at like 3krpm and the tapers off to like 12psi at around 7-8krpm. But then when i run it on the street and take off in 1st gear, i check the peak boost on my profec B spec 2, it reads usually between 13.5-13.8psi.

Is this just an inaccuracy in the boost controller or does it actually spike higher in lower gears?

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/183636-boost-build-vs-gears/
Share on other sites

Higher gears I find generally bring boost on earlier (If say accelerating from 2000RPM) As the turbo has more time to accelerate.

But I generally find that it spikes around a bit more in the lower gears as the boost controller has less time to react to boost spikes.

It also depends on how the boost controller is setup.

yeah it would be a mix of things that determine what it does. in higher gears it can generally build more boost as there is more load, but in low gears the boost can spike so much quicker that it goes higher before the controller knows what's going on.

  • 4 months later...

I have a GCG highflow on the rb25. 15psi is up by about 3500-4000rpm in 2nd then less than 3500rpm in 3rd and 4th.

In 1st though I think I only have 6psi at ~3900rpm and 11psi ~5000rpm.

Is this normal? Anyone with HKS2535 or GCG turbos noticed what there boost is like in 1st. The car is very quick but I reckon the stock turbo is better at <4500rpm in 1st. I think I had 7-8psi by 3500rpm in 1st with the stocker. I guess the load isn't there in 1st so I shouldn't be too tough on it.

Edited by benl1981

My understanding is that boost is pressure the engine isn't ingesting, load is time based as the higher the gear the slower the motor RPM is accelerating (therefore there's an increased resistance to air flow going into the motor)

This combined with the fact your often using more throttle to maintain adequate acceleration in higher gears results in a greater "backlog" of air in front of the motor, meaning more boost and finally more power. Its s viscous cycle 

As others have said Phil, your generally more likely to experience a boost spike in higher gears, not lower, as its these higher airflow / faster boost transient conditions that tax a wastegate and EBC's chances of responding accordingly.

In your post though, your not comparing apples to apples. How does your 4th gear max boost and spiking issue compare to 4th gear on the street?

EDIT: Noticed im talking to a dood who asked a Q 4 months ago - whoops.

Boost in lower gears can be affected by dump, zhaust size, WG flap sealing ability... and most importantly EBC.. are you running one? It's not completely easy to compare your setup to others.

Edited by GeeTR
  • 2 years later...

diggin up and old thread here....

ive got my profec b spec running 13.5psi in my r32 gtr, usual mods aftermarket front pipes, high flow cat, 3.5" cat back, pods..

if i come to a stop, reset Peak Boost, then take off hard in first, go in second gear and take it easy, if i go into Peak boost again it shows it peaked at 14.5ish psi, but the thing is i never see this displayed on the screen ? the screens shows 13.4 -13.6psi

then i did another test, reset peak boost while driving in 4th, drop it down to second and accelerate, then go into 3rd etc then cruise it, peak boost shows 13.5psi...which is good !

so my questions is why does it peak to much in 1st gear ? why isnt it displayed on the screen ? but is saved as "peak boost"??

any info would be great !

probably from boost building much quicker when it first comes on. the profec doesnt react quick enough to stop it spiking 1psi. you could help it by lowering the start boost and gain a little bit but thats gonna make boost build slower in other gears. personally i wouldnt worry, 1psi extra in first isnt gonna make the slightest difference

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • Am I correct in assuming that the R35's are getting the classic skyline haircut off the odometer?  Quick search on carsales, there are 33 08 and 09 GTR's for sale, only 2 of them have more then 100,000km's on them (116,075 and 110,000 respectively).  And somehow there are about 25 for sale with around 60,000kms? Looks like the classic skyline haircut to me =/
    • @Stringycheese  Have you only gone to the one blue slip workshop?  There will be a heap of them where ever you live, good odds that the next place you go to will pass the car.  Unfortunately (or fortunately?) every blue slip / engineering workshop will be different and will be happy passing or failing different things - despite working from the same set of rules. It's kinda like 2 lawyers arguing over a piece of legislation, each saying their interpretation is correct. Might seem strange that this happens when it comes to getting a modified car passed, but this is very much a thing. A big part of the game is finding an engineer / workshop that is on the same page as you.
    • Bah. I daily mine. ~60km per work day, 10-12 thousand km per year. What's the point of having a dirty old Datto and leaving it in the shed. It needs to be driven and enjoyed while the govco allows us to do so. It will only be a few years before we're forbidden to even start up internal combustion engines.
    • Judging by that spring perch and the normal looking spring on it - not a coilover. Well.... it is a coilover, just a stock format coilover, rather than what everyone calls a coilover.
    • Yes it is. We get stock from Nismo directly. I'm happy to take photos/video of it as proof before I ship it with timestamps or whathaveyou.
×
×
  • Create New...