Jump to content
SAU Community

Garrett G Series


Recommended Posts

I think HKS got the first of the Inconel GT turbines in the early 1990s . Think things like GT2530 and GT3037 on early GTRs .

I'm a bit surprised that Garrett haven't gone with something along the lines of the 7163s mixed flow turbine . Sort of half way between a (conventional) radial in flow turbine and an axial flow turbine . This can make turbine housing designs specialised and maybe this is too much of a change for Garrett at this stage . They have to think of production economics as well as performance improvements . 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Yeah I was a bit surprised too, I am sure I saw hints somewhere they were toying with them but it looks like the gas hits the blade in a fairly radial manner going by the wheel shape on the G25.  Otherwise yeah - 9 blade turbines seem to be a thing of the moment currently 

 

Either way, going by what they are saying they clearly flow really well - here is hoping they derive enough torque from the exhaust gas to drive the rotating mass good... They are suggesting that the new design also improves spool which is pretty epic if accurate for a given wheel size, especially with the massive flow improvement.  

 

FB_IMG_1509757940006.jpg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I have the same concern about feeding the compressor correctly, especially on the 660. That's big power for such a small turbine. I'm stoked by the claimed flow on .92 a/r, those things flows like hell compared to a gt28 turbine.
I'm waiting some dyno/video of them in action to see if the claims are realistics or not.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

19 hours ago, LaurelPWR said:

I would assume they have plans for G30 sizes... Here's hoping these G25's do what is claimed... And If so, could it be too much to hope for a G30 type to produce 400-700hp emoji848.pngemoji848.png

And that's exactly where I am at, if these are anything to go by - and the response matches what we'd expect from a Garrett with those wheel sizes, then a G30-range could be a game changer.  They should be shipping from December/January apparently, here's hoping some people get their hands on them and let loose.

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

And that's exactly where I am at, if these are anything to go by - and the response matches what we'd expect from a Garrett with those wheel sizes, then a G30-range could be a game changer.  They should be shipping from December/January apparently, here's hoping some people get their hands on them and let loose.


Yes let loose is the key words... 20-30psi should do [emoji1362]
Link to comment
Share on other sites

With brand new model turbos are they a bit like brand new model cars ?  The first model (year of manufacturing) they have a few issues, then get it sorted out by year 2 (best time to buy) ??

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, GTSBoy said:

No turbo manufacturer is going to quote power at the wheels.

I think it's pretty much as retarded that they are claiming it at the engine.

Wonder if we can put one on a good 5.9litre Cummins and hook it to an engine dyno shooting for 660hp and take Garrett to task for it when it doesn't, but the Borg Warner compound setup we shove on next does it without hesitation.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Lithium said:

I think it's pretty much as retarded that they are claiming it at the engine.

Yuh, obviously.  But at least there is a semi-reasonable formula for converting mass airflow into power in an optimised petrol engine.  Whereas wheel horsepower depends on the number of rubber bands in the dyno software, or some other ouija board factors.

Edited by GTSBoy
Link to comment
Share on other sites

12 minutes ago, GTSBoy said:

Yuh, obviously.  But at least there is a semi-reasonable formula for converting mass airflow into power in an optimised petrol engine.  Whereas wheel horsepower depends on the number of rubber bands in the dyno software, or some other ouija board factors.

Agreed, though 660hp @ engine is pretty optimistic stuff on petrol from that turbo :O    

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, GTSBoy said:

Oh yeah.  Not arguing about that. 

Didn't think there was any argument about anything, I was just viewing my disdain for any turbo manufacturer making hp claims :)   It has made for some very frustrating conversations in the past

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I know there's a general dislike around the joint for twin setups, but given the hit and miss results of the GTX series, I'm interested to see what results come out of the woodwork for the G series.

...and if that fails, how good this series (larger frames) are in single config :)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, Super Drager said:

The power number is nothing more than a guide, a 50lb/min turbo will be rated around the 500hp mark

No no, Garrett have changed their new turbos to be 11hp per lb/min but continued rating their older turbos with 10hp per lb/min.  They may as well have just made their dyno read higher for all their newer turbos ;)

Flow numbers make a lot more sense, you work out how much your engine needs - you pick a turbo from it and if you've done a good job - profit!  It'll make what it makes on your chosen dyno.

 

Link to comment
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

    • I think the pic in the first post is another car, and post 7 is OP's car with standard arms and swaybar swaybar swaybar. I can't tell what brand the silver coilovers are, and even if I could I don't know whether the spring rate is OK, if you can find a brand on the shocks and numbers on the springs that might help. Also, if you can measure the ride height from centre of your wheel to the guard that will help with advice too as handling suffers if ride height is too low
    • sadly, pics no work. that car must have spent a lot of time in a cryo bubble
    • In the first photo you posted, the colour of the control arms are the signature colour for Ikeya. Same for the swaybar, signature colour for Whiteline.  I like Hardrace, they also do hardened rubber bushes if your car is mainly a street car.  I like GKTech as well, but they use a lot of rose joints in their stuff so might not be the best choice for everyone.  The system might have been good back in its day, but it's a prehistoric system now. I suspect that most people have removed the HICAS as they want the car to do what they want to do, not what the car wants to do. From what I also understand, it isn't consistent in it's behaviour on track so it's hard to trust the car/know where its absolute limits are for track use.  Having said that, I think the HICAS eliminator kit was the first thing I installed when I bought my car. I don't personally have any experience with the HICAS system on a race track.  
    • Thanks for the info. Didn’t know I had aftermarket control arms already? Will talk to my garage. What brand would u recommend if I want to play around with my camber more? I would think my camber is around stock level right now or more negative now due to lowering with coilovers. I will be lower her again 1.5 cm to get some more.    also why does everyone like to remove the hicas system? Is it because most don’t work properly anymore or ppl just don’t like them. Mine is functioning as it should be right now.    thanks for the good info 
    • It looks like you've got Ikeya control arms and an aftermarket sway bar, maybe whiteline?  Or am I just going crazy? lol Unfortunately it won't, but what it will do is look really pretty. That's about all unfortunately.  How much neg camber do you currently have? Generally lowing the car dials in quite a bit of neg camber as it is. If you do go down this path, your best bet is get adjustable arms, toe arms (or preferably a good HICAS elimination kit) and traction rods. With all 3 being adjustable, you'll be able to dial out any bump steer that is introduced by playing with the camber settings. 
×
×
  • Create New...