Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Hi guys

I have been through almost every BOV topic / post / thread on this and the sylineowners.com forum ad infinitum, but still have not seen any discussion on the below:

Here's a little background info: I have an R33 GTST with...

2835Pro S set to 1.1 Bar

HKS induction

Z32 AFM

Apexi PFC / Boost control kit (and Datalogit on the way)

ARC Frount Mount

HKS SSQV BOV!!

Plus other bits that are not really relevant to this discussion

My tuner has plumbed the boost control kit into pre intercooler piping, basically just off the turbo (boost gauge on PFC commander never shows vacuum!), which I can understand the reasoning - you see actual boost pressure from the turbo, not post Intercooler / throttle body boost). Also, all recirc piping has been removed / blanked off, so I can't really head back down the recirc route.

Because of this new "plumb boost feed directly off turbo" method, I now see massive spikes of 1.9 Bar plus massive flutter on gear change (you wouldn't normally see this when the boost controller is tee'd off the manifold). I'm guessing here that the BOV is not opening enough (it does open a little though).

So, there are two things to note with this issue:

1. HKS SSQV. Now I don't want to go into recirc / atmo discussions (as we've all seen multiple different theories here :blink: ) so can anyone tell me if this BOV can discharge the excess boost (1.1 Bar) effeciently? One thing I've noted with this BOV as well, is that the pressure generated by the turbo pushes against the piston, keeping it closed. So in theory, wouldn't manifold vacuum have to be greater than the boost pressure to pull the piston out?

2. 1.9 Bar being measured at the turbo. Surely this is bad?! For the guys that do not run a BOV, when the throttle body is closed, this equates to (I assume that a closed throttle has an area of 25mm / 0.025m (radius) squared times pi = 0.001963m2):

Pressure = Force x Area

1.9 x .98 (to get atmospheres) = Force x 0.001963

1.82 / 0.001963 = 927 N

Force = Mass x Acceleration

927 = Mass x 9.8m/s/s (gravity)

Therefore Mass = approx 100Kg?!

So an instantaneous mass of 100Kg is either being applied to the throttle butterfly / throttle butterfly pin, or the turbo blades?!?! Even if my theory of obtaining a figure for mass is incorrect, there can be no argument that 927N of force is being applied to either / both these parts, instantaneously...

Has anyone else measured boost spikes on the turbo side, or is there something completely wrong with my setup?? Thoughts / input on my force theory would be welcomed, as would an idea on an appropriate atmo BOV to vent the right amount of boost...

Cheers

Steve

P.S. I have now changed into my flame-retardant suite - let the burring commence! :)

-20 points for doing math on NY eve :blink::)

Edit: I should prolly post something worthwhile.

Those BOV's have been used on cars running more boost then that.

The reversion and boost spike your seeing is clearly due to your BOV not opening properly. Check the vacuum feed your using (between TB and motor yes?) Check the BOV on the bench with a vacuum pump maybe?

The trick for easy 100% workability would be to use a recirc BOV, not an atmo one... but you don’t wanna hear that :D

Your calcs could be correct, but the way the comp wheel is shaped means pulses can go backwards through it much easier (iv heard) and air ain't that viscous

my 2 cents

Edited by GeeTR

You havnt taken into account that there is vacuum on the other side of the throttle plate, so that force is more like 150kg. I dont think a boost spike like that woiuld be particularly uncommon, its just that people dont usually measure it. Maybe try blocking the BOV altogether, and ill bet it goes to 3bar.

Kilograms are not a measure of force guys. All you've calculated is the mass you'd have to apply a force of 927N to in order to accelerate it at 9.8m/s/s in ideal conditions, which has nothing to do with this.

Stick with the 900N force, although in reality i think you'd find the conditions way, WAY more complex and delicate. Some sort of sensors would help :blink:

Kilograms are not a measure of force guys. All you've calculated is the mass you'd have to apply a force of 927N to in order to accelerate it at 9.8m/s/s in ideal conditions, which has nothing to do with this.

Stick with the 900N force, although in reality i think you'd find the conditions way, WAY more complex and delicate. Some sort of sensors would help :(

Hmmm, seeing as we are all living on the same planet, fro arguements sake Kg is an effective measurement, as he was simply trying to determine a relative amount in perspective.

-20 points for doing math on NY eve :devil::D

Edit: I should prolly post something worthwhile.

Those BOV's have been used on cars running more boost then that.

The reversion and boost spike your seeing is clearly due to your BOV not opening properly. Check the vacuum feed your using (between TB and motor yes?) Check the BOV on the bench with a vacuum pump maybe?

The trick for easy 100% workability would be to use a recirc BOV, not an atmo one... but you don't wanna hear that :(

Your calcs could be correct, but the way the comp wheel is shaped means pulses can go backwards through it much easier (iv heard) and air ain't that viscous

my 2 cents

:worship: It was still afternoon here in the UK, so the brain was (kinda) functioning :) I'm not feeling particularly clever today however...

It appears the best route for me to take is get all the bits back for a recirc. Can this be done, even if my engine has been tuned for no recirc?

Oh, and happy new year everyone!

Steve

I don't see why you've set the plumbing up that way. With a decent intercooler you shouldn't be seeing massive pressure drops anyway.

As for the massive spike, a blow off valve is basically a piston or valve with a spring on it, and a vacuum/pressure line running to it. While the throttle body is open, the idea is that the pressure inside your inlet piping is equal to what's held inside the chamber in the blow off valve. What I'd make sure is that the vacuum line going to the blow-off valve is coming from somewhere post-throttle body.

2. 1.9 Bar being measured at the turbo. Surely this is bad?! For the guys that do not run a BOV, when the throttle body is closed, this equates to (I assume that a closed throttle has an area of 25mm / 0.025m (radius) squared times pi = 0.001963m2):

Pressure = Force x Area

1.9 x .98 (to get atmospheres) = Force x 0.001963

1.82 / 0.001963 = 927 N

Force = Mass x Acceleration

927 = Mass x 9.8m/s/s (gravity)

Therefore Mass = approx 100Kg?!

i don't know how you came up with this, but it would have nothing to do with the air-flow dynamics inside the engine

The prob is the boost gauge and PFC boost gauge cannot be taken from the turbo compressor outlet, there is no vacuum in the turbo, and also there is massive pressure fluctuations. If you hook up a mechanical boost gauge, you'll see the needle dance around like crazy, and even worse when you back off, this is where your "spike" is coming from, doesnt mean the engine is acctually seeing 1.9 bar.

Boost gauge needs to be taken from manifold, and EBC needs to be taken from turbo outlet.

The prob is the boost gauge and PFC boost gauge cannot be taken from the turbo compressor outlet, there is no vacuum in the turbo, and also there is massive pressure fluctuations. If you hook up a mechanical boost gauge, you'll see the needle dance around like crazy, and even worse when you back off, this is where your "spike" is coming from, doesnt mean the engine is acctually seeing 1.9 bar.

Boost gauge needs to be taken from manifold, and EBC needs to be taken from turbo outlet.

Thats what he is saying, the pressure spike inside the IC piping on gearchange is 1.9bar, hence the pressure on the closed throttle plate.

I don't see why you've set the plumbing up that way. With a decent intercooler you shouldn't be seeing massive pressure drops anyway.

As for the massive spike, a blow off valve is basically a piston or valve with a spring on it, and a vacuum/pressure line running to it. While the throttle body is open, the idea is that the pressure inside your inlet piping is equal to what's held inside the chamber in the blow off valve. What I'd make sure is that the vacuum line going to the blow-off valve is coming from somewhere post-throttle body.

I'm not getting a pressure drop, it's the fact I'm getting spiking of .8 bar - that's the problem! I can only put this down to a faulty HKS BOV (I've disassembled for inspection, and everything's in order as far as I can see)

What I question with the HKS BOV is, if you have a look at the way the SSQV works, boost is always in the chamber of the BOV pushing the seat against the seal - it helps keep the valve shut (in theory you could block the vacuum line, and the piston will seal against the seat based on pre throttle body boost). Most BOV's (non-HKS!) I'm aware of use spring tension and boost found on the vacuum line to remain fully closed. When there is vacuum at the manifold, both manifold vacuum AND boost in the pre manifold piping are used to push the valve out / compress the spring, and vent the excess boost. What I don't understand with the HKS is, the vacuum release has to work against spring tension AND residual boost pressure to open! >_<

Well, to answer my own question (under "Product Detail") http://www.racinglab.com/mit3019turhk.html still not sure if I understand fully though...

Also (for Simon-R32), the way the PFC boost controller works is, it comes with a MAP sensor that plugs into the PFC and uses the existing two wires to the stock boost control solenoid. Because the PFC uses this MAP sensor to display boost on the Commander and control boost, the Commander will never display vacuum (due to my MAP sensor being plumbed into turbo piping rather than post throttle body). Is this OK? Does the PFC need to know if there is vacuum? Before I had the work done, tuned etc., I had plumbed the MAP sensor into post throttle body...

Thanks for all your input...

Steve

Edited by skybus

yeah your map sensor needs to be on manifold, then it will read vac and correct boost pressure.

im fairly certain your "spiking" issues doesnt exist either, its just air fluctuations from the turbo causing the gauge to go spastic.

i used to have an AVCR which uses the very same map sensor and solenoid as the PFC kit, and i had it hooked up to manifold and then to turbo outlet, and with stock turbo it said it was spiking to 1.5 bar... which is simply;y not true, the figures were fluctuating like crazy, i was only running 10 psi haha

I wouldnt be surprised at all idf the stock turbo without bov makes 1.5 bar on liftoff/gearchange. The turbo can be flowing 100's cubic feet per minute, at a pressure ratio of 1.7, then the throttle is shut, and the 100's CFM has nowhere to go, the piping/intercooler act like a big pneumatic spring, with the pressure building right up, then the pressure waves bounce back off the throttle body and out through the turbo, then the process repeats itself, hence fully sic flutter

Kilograms are a measure of mass, nothing to do with different planets.

I thought Kilograms were a measure of weight, and Newtons are a measure of mass. Its been a long time though.

I hate the SSQ BOV's; i found them to be more about noise than anything else. Have a look at the opening and you can see that its not significantly bigger than a stock item; thats why theyre so loud, so they cant really be efficient at venting air between the throttle and turbo at 1.9 bar. I really like the Tial 50mm BOV's.

Shaun.

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

    • it was good to see our presence at GTR festival..hope to see more SAU at these events 
    • This is awesome.     
    • Thanks for the quick replies guys its appreciated. A small extension was welded onto the standard 6boost external gate pipe which you can see where the pipe goes from black to stainless just below and to the right of the rear housing in the first picture. Overall I would say the flow is pretty good other than 6boosts choice to come straight off the collector at a decent angle.. Not sure why I went with two valves, I originally replaced the stock twin bovs with the GFB when I had the twins on. When I purchased the EFR it came with the Turbosmart Kompact BOV so I figured that would be a better option than the stock EFR Bov. I don't believe the Turbosmart BOV is adjustable? When I get the spike and then sudden dip in boost pressure, the turbo speed does drop as well. Stock head size wise however I believe it has Neo Turbo springs and a Neo Turbo intake camshaft and an aftermarket exhaust camshaft in the vicinity of 260 degrees. We didn't try a different MAC valve, we tried two different ways of plumbing it and we also tried removing the mac valve entirely and just having the boost source from the turbo directly connected to the wastegate and it still spiked / dropped and exhibited the same behaviour. Standard R33 GTR 5 speed tansmission. I'm running a Haltech Elite 2500 and can provide some logs if you. I understand what you're saying in that it looks like an auto plot however no, it's still a manual and it just has a lot of torque down low, for all intents and purposes it's a very impressive street car. I've attached a photo of the quickbitz dyno plot which was when the only difference is I was running -5 twin turbos with a mac valve. As you can see theres a decent dip in AFRs between 125kmh and 135kmh. Our problem now is not that the AFRs are dropping, just the boost pressure is dropping, however it is evident in the same RPM range of the map, coincidentally or not.
    • What transmission are you running?  It's a bit tricky with the scaling, but at face value the power "curve" looks more like a "line" which is a bit odd... basically a lot more like a dyno plot I'd expect with a highish (compared to a factory auto) stall torque converter type setup. If this is running an auto then this kind of boost control challenge is definitely a thing, the rpm scale on the dyno doesn't reflect what the engine is actually doing (unless the dyno has access to the engine's ACTUAL speed electronically) and what you'll get is a big rpm flare up as the engine torque launches past the converter pump's ability to resist torque at that rpm, then as the converter starts picking up rpm it will kinda even out again and the engine rpm will pick up more steadily. The trick with this "flare up" is if it's kinda near the boost threshold for the turbo then the engine's airflow requirements to maintain the previous boost level will outrun the turbo's ability to supply that boost - so you end up with a natural flattening off, if not dip when that happens.   If you are running closed loop, or even tune the "feed forward" wastegate duty cycle to deal with that rpm spike then when the engine starts settling to a more typical climb you'll actually have a situation where the gate is "too closed" and boost will run away for a bit, then have to pull down again.      It's not trivial to get this perfect as most boost control systems are generally expecting more predictable engine rpm rates of change, but if you *know* that's whats going on then you can at least "accept your fate" and realise getting that area perfect is kinda chasing your tail a bit, and assume that if the rest is working sensibly and the spike/dip isn't completely uncontrolled then you should be good. Sorry if I've gone off on a tangent, but the dyno plot and boost control behaviour look a LOT like what I've seen tuning autos in the past. What ECU are you running? Could possibly be convinced into looking at logs if I get too bored this weekend haha.
    • A few things that seem a bit off here. - why is there 2 BOV’s?  - the turbo smart BOV on the compressor housing, is it turned up ALL the way? I have seen this become an issue on old man Pete’s car. It would push open and recirc, turbo speed would rise and the boost pressure would do weird things. - stock head? Does that include springs? - tried a different MAC valve? Is it plumbed correctly?
×
×
  • Create New...