Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Fellas I've not tried these on RB's or anything for that matter .

From a technical viewpoint the combination of a 60.1mm turbine and an 82mm compressor is not ideal . Thats not to say it wont work at all but , Garretts production engineers believe that the turbine cannot develop adequate shaft power to efficiently drive a compressor of that size and capacity . Even if it could the sort of airflow that a GT40 compressor can develop would be let down by the shortage of exhaust flow capacity of the GT30 turbine/housing .

American Honda tuning firms spend their lives doing back to back tests with GT30R's , GT3040R's and GT3540R's and the results are always the same . The 3040R can develop higher power levels than the GT30R but high turbine inlet pressure (back pressure) becomes the limitation . The GT3540R has the same compressor/cover as the GT3040R but its turbine in 8mm larger in diameter or a smidge over 1.25 times its cross sectional area . So in effect the levers driving the shaft and compressor are longer (more mechanical advantage to develop shaft torque) and the path for exhaust gasses is less restrictive .

The GT3540R will nearly always be capable of higher power outputs than the GT3040R because it can get lots of air in and lets lots of exhaust out - in balenced proportions . They can be hamstrung with too small an exhaust housing in an effort to spool it on an engine really too small for them , but the result is nearly always compressor surge .

You won't be the first or last to try bridging the gap between the GT30R and GT3540R . To a degree it can be done , this is why different sized (ARR) turbine and compressor housings are made . If response is important then larger housings on the GT30R can extend it beyond the norm . Alternatively the mid size turbine housing and one of the mid or smaller T04E comp covers could wake up the larger GT3540R . Its always going to be a compromise .

which would be more suited to a 3ltr RB30det. the gt3040 or gt3540?

wats the difference in lag, much more from the gt3540?

Fellas I've not tried these on RB's or anything for that matter .

From a technical viewpoint the combination of a 60.1mm turbine and an 82mm compressor is not ideal . Thats not to say it wont work at all but , Garretts production engineers believe that the turbine cannot develop adequate shaft power to efficiently drive a compressor of that size and capacity . Even if it could the sort of airflow that a GT40 compressor can develop would be let down by the shortage of exhaust flow capacity of the GT30 turbine/housing .  

American Honda tuning firms spend their lives doing back to back tests with GT30R's , GT3040R's and GT3540R's and the results are always the same . The 3040R can develop higher power levels than the GT30R but high turbine inlet pressure (back pressure) becomes the limitation . The GT3540R has the same compressor/cover as the GT3040R but its turbine in 8mm larger in diameter or a smidge over 1.25 times its cross sectional area . So in effect the levers driving the shaft and compressor are longer (more mechanical advantage to develop shaft torque) and the path for exhaust gasses is less restrictive .  

The GT3540R will nearly always be capable of higher power outputs than the GT3040R because it can get lots of air in and lets lots of exhaust out - in balenced proportions . They can be hamstrung with too small an exhaust housing in an effort to spool it on an engine really too small for them , but the result is nearly always compressor surge .  

You won't be the first or last to try bridging the gap between the GT30R and GT3540R . To a degree it can be done , this is why different sized (ARR) turbine and compressor housings are made . If response is important then larger housings on the GT30R can extend it beyond the norm . Alternatively the mid size turbine housing and one of the mid or smaller T04E comp covers could wake up the larger GT3540R . Its always going to be a compromise .

which would be more suited to a 3ltr RB30det. the gt3040 or gt3540?

wats the difference in lag, much more from the gt3540?

I can only repeat what I was told by someone who's been there .

SK said that the RB25 or 26/31's make that much exhaust flow that they'll spool nearly anything . He said that ideally you want the turbo to spool up at approx 32-3300 revs otherwise it tries to spool up at the gearchange point and drinks copious amounts of fuel .

I imagine that twin cam RB30's are not lacking torque off boost as long as the compression ratio is adequate . This is where you need to understand the static and dynamic compression ratio part .

Static comp is worked out assuming no inlet restriction . Dynamic comp ratio takes into account the partly or nearly closed throttle plate/s . Obviously you can't have nearly as good cylinder filling with a closed throttle as an open one . The more air you can get into the cylinder the more there is to compress for high cylinder pressures post combustion . Higher static CR means all else being equal higher dynamic compression ie same volume of gas squeesed into smaller space = higher compression pressure .

Where this takes us to in the real world is more part throttle low rev torque to drive us down the road . This extra torque is not gained from boost so we get to start the onset of positive pressure higher up the rev range . We have the opportunity here to use larger turbines / housings to offset the restriction at the other end of the rev range and retain a little more volumetric efficiency . Part throttle driving off boost give us the ability to get good fuel mileage at 110 on the expressways .

I don't like the GT3040R personally (based on theory not practise) , and in the RB25 - 26/31 case we are not short of exhaust flow or part throttle torque so the bigger turbined GT3540R should pay off handsomely . My vote goes to the GT3540R .

Cheers Adrian .

RB25 speaking, actually using it.

I have a GT30, GT series wheel thats rated @ 600hp.

i wouldnt want it spooling any later than what it does now.

makes 16psi above 4000rpm and then power climbs nicely and fast, but limited to 7800rpm.

for the RB30DET/RB25DETT, the bigger GT35 is the go as the exhaust flow is a lot more.

a lot of the calaisturbo.com boys use the bigger GT35 on thier 30's and it gives them brilliant results as they can get away with running the slightly bigger version

Apparently the GT35R .82 exh. a/r makes ~1bar by 3500rpm on the RB30DET.

It makes serious boost by 4000rpm.

Its only what I've been told by another GT35R user on his RB30DET.

He also had the GT30R, which was to put it bluntly, crap.

It just didn't have the airflow to keep up with the 3ltr over 5500rpm causing power to flatten out and torque drop off.

The RB30DET. I wouldn't select any turbo other than the GT35R.

Play with exhaust a/r's to get the response and top end you are after.

According to turbine maps the GT30R .82 a/r flows the same airflow at the same pressure as the GT35R .63 a/r does.

Cubes I will probably go with the 1.06 ARR GT3540R just not sure about which comp cover . My engine will have 9 to 1 CR via the JE VG30 Piston solution , expensive but worth it . Wont be built in the near future , so far have 33 26 top end and pistons so still gathering bits as funds allow .

Chow Adrian .

Nice.. :/

My build took me around 2 years from the purchase of the first bits. :P

The VLT boys say the 1.06 a/r isn't laggy. I'm going to play with exhaust a/rs depending on how the .82 is. If its sweet then I won't bother. If its slightly laggier than I want I will drop down to the .63.

According to the 3ltrs airflow and where I would expect the gt35R to spool with a .63, it shouldn't surge.

2.5ltr.. it will surge.

G'day Cubes , some Garrett contacts in Torrance Calif are trying to push the GT40R turbo for the 26/31 hybrid . They reckon full boost from 4000 but its getting seriously big . I'm getting them to chase up details of available turbine housings but LOL probably a bigger mouthful than I can chew on !

I do know of someone over here with a custom "GT3542R" hybrid that reckons it spools fine . Its using the 102mm GT42 compressor , big enough to hide under .

I've gotta get back to SK to see if more than 9:1 CR is of any benefit ie 9.2 ?

Cheers Adrian .

If the GT35R is making 1bar by 3500rpm thats ~23.3lb/s which is some where around 250hp.

Torque = power / rpm * 5252

so to make around 250hp at 3500rpm it must be making around 375lb-ft or 500Nm of torque.

Some nice torque.

Obviously the calc is rough but gives us a rough idea.

Please tell me if I'm working it out wrong.. :P I think I have. I.e I have not taken in to account the compressors efficiency at that rpm & pr.

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

    • Bit of a pity we don't have good images of the back/front of the PCB ~ that said, I found a YT vid of a teardown to replace dicky clock switches, and got enough of a glimpse to realize this PCB is the front-end to a connected to what I'll call PCBA, and as such this is all digital on this PCB..ergo, battery voltage probably doesn't make an appearance here ; that is, I'd expect them to do something on PCBA wrt power conditioning for the adjustment/display/switch PCB.... ....given what's transpired..ie; some permutation of 12vdc on a 5vdc with or without correct polarity...would explain why the zener said "no" and exploded. The transistor Q5 (M33) is likely to be a digital switching transistor...that is, package has builtin bias resistors to ensure it saturates as soon as base threshold voltage is reached (minimal rise/fall time)....and wrt the question 'what else could've fried?' ....well, I know there's an MCU on this board (display, I/O at a guess), and you hope they isolated it from this scenario...I got my crayons out, it looks a bit like this...   ...not a lot to see, or rather, everything you'd like to see disappears down a via to the other side...base drive for the transistor comes from somewhere else, what this transistor is switching is somewhere else...but the zener circuit is exclusive to all this ~ it's providing a set voltage (current limited by the 1K3 resistor R19)...and disappears somewhere else down the via I marked V out ; if the errant voltage 'jumped' the diode in the millisecond before it exploded, whatever that V out via feeds may have seen a spike... ....I'll just imagine that Q5 was switched off at the time, thus no damage should've been done....but whatever that zener feeds has to be checked... HTH
    • I think Fitmit had some, have a look on there (theyre Australian as well)
    • Hah, fair enough! But if you learn with this one you can drive any other OEM manual. No modern luxury features like auto rev-matching or hillstart assist to give you a false sense of confidence. And a heavy car with not that much torque so it stalls easily. 
    • Actually, I'd say all three are the automatic option. Just the different trim levels. The manual would be RSFS, no? 
×
×
  • Create New...