Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Hey everyone. A mate of mine is building a twin turbo Toyota Hilux with the 2.4L 4 cylinder efi motor. Using R32 GTR turbos. He had it running once and it blew an exhaust wheel when it came on boost. Since we didn't know the history of the turbos we assumed they were at fault. He got a pair of rebuilt turbos and sure enough the same thing happened.

The whole build has been done at home so there's a lot of potential issues. Just a couple problems that come to mind:

- It is currently running with no intercooler (against my advice, though I don't think it would cause this)

- Home made exhaust manifold. Has runners of considerably different lengths with plenty of bends.

Anyone have any idea what could be causing this?

Cheers, Josh

^ Are you purposefully posting rubbish tonight?

Anyway, what type of "rebuild" did the 2nd set undergo? Wheels changed?

Also is it the same turbo? Is there enough oil flow?

How much boost is being run?

Rebuild was apparently new wheels (still ceramic) and bearings. Though I never saw the turbos.

Yeah it was the same turbo, asked my mate if they were getting oil and he said they were. Whether it is enough is another question though.

Turbo blew when it hit 7psi for the first time. So very little boost.

Regarding the steel wheel suggestions, if it is blowing ceramic wheels instantly I don't think steel wheels will help. Would be an expensive test.

Rebuild was apparently new wheels (still ceramic) and bearings. Though I never saw the turbos.

Yeah it was the same turbo, asked my mate if they were getting oil and he said they were. Whether it is enough is another question though.

Turbo blew when it hit 7psi for the first time. So very little boost.

Regarding the steel wheel suggestions, if it is blowing ceramic wheels instantly I don't think steel wheels will help. Would be an expensive test.

Lol I like your response that I highlighted in red. Have you researched ceramic turbos at all?

Go the bloody steel wheels for no more busted exhaust turbine.

Lol I like your response that I highlighted in red. Have you researched ceramic turbos at all?

Go the bloody steel wheels for no more busted exhaust turbine.

I know a steel wheel is going to be much more durable than a ceramic. However if something is causing the ceramic wheels to break at very low boost levels the first time it hits boost, whatever is causing it is going to put excessive wear on the steel wheel also, potentially leading to premature failure.

could the whole dodge exhaust manifold be the problem. forcing the exhaust gases onto the rear wheel so it bends alittle and breaks, especially if you have different sized runners to each turbo

Is the rear turbo the culprit or the front turbo that is losing the wheel? It could be the piping itself making one turbo work harder than the other (in case of GTRs it's the rear turbo that does more work since the angle of the twin turbo pipe forces both turbos to fight against each other)

I really don't think replacing the turbo's is going to help.

There is an underlying issue that needs to be found and solved. Simply putting on a new set might still do the same thing. There is a reason they are letting go, and hitting 7psi for the first time is definetely not due to ceramic exhaust wheels.

I'm assuming this is the 2L-TE engine from the LN130? I have done a lot of research on the subject as I own one and have recently fully rebuilt the engine to use until I am ready to go the route I have chosen.

In any event, horsepower isn't what the diesel is all about, it's torque. I understand that by increasing hp, you'll increase torque, but the engine itself isn't designed to be pushed too hard as they already run a 21:1 compression ratio.

If you consider that the 2L-T has only 1 hp less (96hp) than the 2L-TE, the torque increase is from 188Nm to 241Nm with the 2L-TE, and the only difference is the addition of EFI rather than mechanical injection. So by increasing the boost, you won't achieve a great deal of increase in hp.

As it is, the CT-20 that's used on them already is considered too big for the 2.4L diesel, so the twins from a GT-R will be excessive. Apparently the T28 from the S-14/15 is a better option for this engine. I have even read where people have downgraded from the CT-20 to the smaller CT-12 with better results as the boost comes on quicker. I did contemplate using a CT-26 which I was given from a 7M-GTE, but research told me that they are way too laggy and would be a step backwards.

The way I am going is to mate the 5L-E engine to the 2L-TE head. This way I have the 3 litre bottom end and the 2L-TE head will bolt directly onto the block. I can also retain the current ECU and wiring. This is somewhat similar to an R32 owner dropping the RB30 block onto an RB25DE head from an NA R32/A31 (another of my projects, but slightly more involved). I will be modifying the CT-26 turbo to suit the CT-20 manifold and testing the results, but I will more than likely be retaining the CT-20. You must use the the 5L-E and not the 5L if you have the auto gearbox because you need the crank angle sensor on the side of the block.

The best way to go is to drop the 1UZ-FE from a Celsior into the Surf. It's a very involved process but everyone who does it has a grin akin to a Cheshire cat.

This doesn't help you with the issue that you're having at the moment, but I think that it may be the wrong road to take with the engine that you're dealing with. I will be watching the thread with interest though, because I have not come across this approach yet and I'm interested in the results if you can get it happening.

Good luck.

Engine is the 22RE petrol. I know the twins probably aren't the best route for him to take. Was originally going to use my old R33 turbo, however the exhaust wheel snapped off before it even made it on the car (had been running 15PSI on my RB20 for ages). So somehow he ended up with a pair of gtr turbos and decided to use them.

If we could have an idea of the power it was making when the turbo let go it may help. If it really came on hard then perhaps the way boost is measured may be wrong. Can you be sure it didn't let go at 20lbs of boost ? not to mention the lack of tuning as I could well imagine the exhaust heat in a lean engine at 20lbs.

The welding dags and high EGT's could make sense. I'll look into how well he cleaned it up. But feel free to keep the suggestions coming!

Skylinecouple; pretty sure it would only have been 7psi. They are running standard gtr actuators, so shouldn't be able to spike that high. And I'm pretty sure this guy would have hooked the boost gauge up correctly.

Lots of good suggestions above. Also, did he buy new actuators or at least verify they are working in unison? You could have one turbo running flat out (then blowing) while the other is cruising. Also, i'd check the oil delivery is within spec. Also, could have been a bad rebuild....

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

    • GCG is a good company, they're a major distributor for Garrett in Japan as well.
    • Nah, OEM washer bottle and brake fluid reservoirs are fine I don't know what it is with the plastic that Mazda used, some plastics, like the washer bottle and brake fluid res are fine, and still look new after 20 years use, where as the coolant expansion tank, and PS reservoir, that I replaced with new OEM items when I first got the car, turned yellow and started getting brittle a few years later If the dirty yellow stained plastics didn't trigger me there wouldn't be an issue, but they did, much like the battery bracket....... Meh As for going back to work full time to support car stuff, nope, why, because I own a Mazda NC MX5, not a Nissan R series Skyline 🤣
    • I've never heard of CJ-motor, so can't advise you on them. I'd just go straight to GCG for a GCG highflow though. Seems no point to use a middleman. I'm somewhat surprised that the price on the CJ site is lower than the GCG retail price. Even though CJ would get a discount of some sort, you would hardly expect them to give up so much margin. Maybe the price is out of date? Having said that "I'd go to GCG"...when I did my highflow, I went to Hypergear. I did this https://hypergearturbos.com/product/rb25dethighflow/#tab-dyno-results with the R34 OP6 450HP profile. With the BB centre (extra $400) and intially with the standard boost actuator, but I eventually got him to send me the high pressure one when I got to the point of being able to actually use it. Ends up costing the same sort of money as the GCG highflow, but this is, of course, the turbo that I KNOW has a shorter length core and so moves the comp cover rearwards. The GCG apparently doesn't do that. My mechanic also swears by the GCG highflow, given that we have another turbo rebuilder who does something essentialy the same as theirs, using Garrett wheels. He says it stands up at really low revs and makes good power. I haven't pushed my HG highflow past ~240-250rwkW yet (should have a little more in it, but unclear how much) and it does have a fairly gentle boost ramp. OK, it's much better now that I have gotten my boost controller tuned up on it.  A lot of my earlier unhappiness was because I couldn't keep the wastegate flap as closed as it needed to be (including some mechanical issues). I'd still prefer it to boost up nearly as quickly as the stocker, and it certainly a bit slower than that. So maybe the GCG one is worth the first look (for you).
    • Ok thanks 🙂 I will higly consider this. Any "known" company for a good reviews and experience to send that off? Is that CJ-motor good one? Or go straight to GCG site? I need to use VPN to even find some of those "shops" let alone access them 🙂 
    • You can literally put in as much WMI as it takes to quench the combustion totally (and then back it off a little, obviously), and it will keep making more and more power. The power comes from the cooling effect of the water (and the meth) and the extra fuel (the meth, which also has massive octane). It is effectively exactly like running E85. One might be slightly better than the other, but they are damn close. But with either you can lean on the boost or the timing (or both) waaaay more than with just petrol and the results are similar. Here's the first thing I googled for an anecdotal bit of evidence. Can't access the attachment without being a gold member, but it is there for the getting if able to, or searched up elsewise perhaps. https://www.hpacademy.com/forum/general-tuning-discussion/show/wmi-vs-e85/
×
×
  • Create New...