Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

IMO you will kill the box eventually with that setup. How long, anyone's guess.

Contact a rebuilder that knows whats going on, talk to them about your use and what they can offer.

KEAS, Yarra Vally Auto's - there are plenty of others around

You'll be wanted higher stall as well to get a bit of mumbo going off the brake etc etc.

depends how serious you want to get, and your budget.

You might even find starting off with a R33 box might be better - so call a few of them and discuss.

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/295791-rb20-internals/#findComment-4930046
Share on other sites

just wanting a fast e.t. nos will help it along,

i dont intend on having a purpose built dragger

That's what they all say at the start, then 3 years down the track the car has no interior, plexiglass and a full ANDRA spec cage.

Edited by D_Stirls
Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/295791-rb20-internals/#findComment-4930408
Share on other sites

I don't think you will have any problem with 250kw out of the 20 (depending on the previous life and they way you treat it)

This is a graph from an internally standard RB20;

It was built using an old smoking motor that was lying around the workshop.

The engine was stripped down, cleaned and reassembled using all the original internals with new rings and bearings added.

A metal headgasket was used and the standard springs were shimmed up to give a little more seat pressure.

The standard rb20det cams are still used but with some "special timing" Without a doubt this is the main limiting factor currently.

One of the reason so much boost is used is to overcome the flow limitations of the std head/cams.

A spare gtr inlet plenum was cut and welded on to the std rb20det inlet runners. The alignment of the runners is off and i am sure this is doing more harm than good, but hey, it's all just for a bit of fun.

There are some cheap bolt on parts used. Cam pulleys, fmic, throttle body, exhaust manifold and wastegate are all ebay cheapies.

The whole project was done as cheaply as possible, in our spare time afterhours, while on the piss.

Now the original plan was to see what sort of numbers could be made from a std internal std capacity rb20det using a remapped factory ecu.

I figured anything over 300rwkw would be a decent number. I also fully expected it to shit out and throw a rod or something.

Pretty much started at 20psi and went up 2psi at a time until the motor blew or it stopped making power. Neither has happened yet.

373rwkwRB20turbotune.jpg

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/295791-rb20-internals/#findComment-4930700
Share on other sites

I don't think you will have any problem with 250kw out of the 20 (depending on the previous life and they way you treat it)

This is a graph from an internally standard RB20;

373rwkwRB20turbotune.jpg

pretty sure it when bang too 30psi and 373 is a ticking time bomb, was a R32 featured in a mag not too long ago yea? :thumbsup:

Edited by URAS
Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/295791-rb20-internals/#findComment-4931076
Share on other sites

nope, that engine never died. It was pulled out after that night as they had a built 25/30 to go in the car. It did over 100 runs above 300kw as well. Last time i was at TT getting my 180 tuned it was sitting in the corner still intact.

LOL and it was a lot more than 30 psi, that's just where the 2 BAR map sensor on the dyno stopped reading.

Here's a thread about it;

http://www.skylinesaustralia.com/forums/Tu...-M-t214053.html

Edited by D_Stirls
Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/295791-rb20-internals/#findComment-4931663
Share on other sites

If your engine has no blow by, knocks or rattles and comes back with a healthy compression test result, then there is no reason why you can reliably make 250rwkws and run up to 17psi.

To do this reliably, make sure your fuelling is sorted, inlet temps and coolant/oil temps are not skyrocketing when you are giving it a squirt and make sure the tuning is good. From there, make sure you always have a good sump of quality oil, i recommend Castrol Edge 10W60 and enjoy RB20 goodness for a long time

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/295791-rb20-internals/#findComment-4931948
Share on other sites

well ive saved up and got all my bits and peices ready and there going on next week.

nismo 555c injectors, greddy e-mange ultimate, hypergear rb25 high-flow (17-18 psi), z32 AFM, hks cam gears, tomei pon cam, splitfire coil packs, plugs gaped to .8mm

FMIC and 50-100hp NOS

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/295791-rb20-internals/#findComment-4948259
Share on other sites

I don't think stock turbine housing can be high flowed to archeive 250rwkws on RB20 thou, ATR43G4 (3582 spec) CHRA in a .82 rear internally gated should be more then enough to make 250rwkws with supporting mods.

Stock internals should be able to do the job with out much issues.

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/295791-rb20-internals/#findComment-4948291
Share on other sites

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

    • Yes, it will take a fair amount of solution but the sodium citrate + citric acid + detergent is cheap stuff. Use laundry detergent instead of dish soap if you want to reduce the bubbles, also you could just buy sodium citrate and add some citric acid to the mix until you get to a weakly acidic solution if you don't feel like dealing with all the bubbling generated by adding everything together. For a fuel tank you need quite a lot of distilled water but it's probably worth the effort.
    • Actually looks like a Nitrous setup now 馃槅
    • @robbo_rb180 I already have a NEO head on the shitbox 馃槑 Just needs beehive springs so I can rev it past the 8600 rpm limiter, then again pointless too, turbo is out of puff lol. Wen da gods let me win lotto eh?
    • Everyone I know with a90 supra at time attack aren't having issues with 3-5 fast laps so far and one is decent powered one too. Saw a k24 swapped 86 with a 8hp70 and big slicks and aero which had no drama's at QR and Manton Park. I've stuck a 25 row cooler in my setup with 8hp45/50 in the hopes of keeping the oil cool as I plan on some racing next year that 20-30min sessions. I've also geared my car so won't be using 7th and 8th gear too. @Dose Pipe Sutututu just needs to get that samsonas in already and have that tassie guy fit a head and rev it too 11ty thousand rpm. 
    • My embedded systems thoughts have me sitting with GTS on this. Variation between same phone hardware, should be small. However, the internal "intensity" or "volume" amount that say Google passes to the app, will be quite different, as the underlying hardware will be passing different levels for the same volume to the Google OS. Until the app creator has had each individual phone, and set benchmarks and calibrations for each, the amount of error can be quite huge.   It can even be observed by using different phones, recording the same noise, and then playing it back, they end up soon ding different. A big reason for it, is even the different types of mics used in phones have different responses, and different frequency ranges. Then you need to get into the DSP, and the variations in those, their sample rates which then effect their frequency range, and then the quality of the DSP, and what type of hardware conversion they do to for the ADC within the DSP. Oh, and let's not forget at the low level phones are designed to cutout loud sounds. It's one of the reasons they suck in really loud environments (eg concerts). The louder you yell, the more you'll get cutout too Note DSP is Digital Signal Processor ADC is the analogue to data converter. I don't have any real data on what the variation would truly be, however, chat GPT says in general, their output is typically between +/-2dB to +/-5dB of what you're really measuring. So realistically, anything from 4 to 10dB variation is possible even with the same devices.
  • Create New...