Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Who has ran one of these with a 1bar actuator?

I had mine on the dyno with it and when it had absolutely no preload on the ball so I could freely blow through the bottom the lowest boost level I was able to achieve was ~19psi. Boost was then tailing off to 17.5psi; I assume due to not enough preload causing it to operate like a traditional bleeder.

On the std rb20 and rb25 actuators it was rock solid; held boost perfectly.

On a mates external gate setup with an 8psi spring it too was rock solid; just didn't like my stiff wastegate. :S

Im assuming the hole drilled was a tad too big and bleeding too much off.

  • Replies 1.8k
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Top Posters In This Topic

Posted Images

The boost controller on ebay is here.

I bought one couple weeks ago. Easy to attach and use, great results on a close to stock setup. I upped from factory boost (5-7 psi) now running up to 11-12psi. Very happy! :unsure:

Hi guys i bought one of these and fitted it exactly like the pic and instructions says to...I find in second it will boost to about 5-7 but in third it spiked to 15 so i dropped right off the gas. Not sure if it would spike higher, to scared to find out. Anyone have a suggestion as to whats goin on???????

Hi guys i bought one of these and fitted it exactly like the pic and instructions says to...I find in second it will boost to about 5-7 but in third it spiked to 15 so i dropped right off the gas. Not sure if it would spike higher, to scared to find out. Anyone have a suggestion as to whats goin on???????

I had the same problem. Read my thread, might fix your problem.

interesting 1 for ya. i had my car on a mates dyno a while back. Got 179rwkw @11psi using one of these boost controllers. changed it over to a new turbosmart one just to see if any difference was made to output and got 186rwkw at 11psi.....

interesting huh.... can anyone shed some light on why this might have been??

  • 1 month later...

hi guys just received an email from jrdsport to advise me i can upgrade from my manual boost controller to there dual stage kit.

This will apply to those who have both the turbotech or jrdsport manual boost controller, im thinking about getting it.

Here is the link for those who are interested.

http://cgi.ebay.com.au/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?Vi...E:IT&ih=014

  • 2 months later...

The bloke selling them on ebay is ok to deal with, its cheap, easy (too easy) to install cause you dont need to buy anything else and it works. Installed mine about 3 days ago all seems to be ok so far, im happy with it.

Gee didnt think this would go on for 80 pages but i got mine about 10 months ago and havent had a problem good for bugger all cash

DOES ANYONE HAVE A PIC OF INSTALLATION ON A RB20

CHEERS

damn capslock...

Has anyone else had an issue of boost dropping off higher in the rev range?

Mine has been working fine for ages & i just came back from holidays and noticed it was dopping off about 1.5psi.

I've given the spring a slight stretch but it didn't seem to do anything.

My boost is set at 12psi and it hits it, but it drops down to 10.5psi.

interesting 1 for ya. i had my car on a mates dyno a while back. Got 179rwkw @11psi using one of these boost controllers. changed it over to a new turbosmart one just to see if any difference was made to output and got 186rwkw at 11psi.....

interesting huh.... can anyone shed some light on why this might have been??

I've done the exact same thing, back to back, with my car, without touching a thing. It's just how the dyno calcs to give minor changes.

Who has ran one of these with a 1bar actuator?

I had mine on the dyno with it and when it had absolutely no preload on the ball so I could freely blow through the bottom the lowest boost level I was able to achieve was ~19psi. Boost was then tailing off to 17.5psi; I assume due to not enough preload causing it to operate like a traditional bleeder.

On the std rb20 and rb25 actuators it was rock solid; held boost perfectly.

On a mates external gate setup with an 8psi spring it too was rock solid; just didn't like my stiff wastegate. :S

Im assuming the hole drilled was a tad too big and bleeding too much off.

I'm running one of these with a hks actuator and with almost no preload on the ball it makes around 15psi...with preload and adjusting it i get about 18psi with a 2-3 psi spike in 4th gear...i guess its because i'm using a longer hose with the valve and also because it is a mechanical system and it takes time to stabilize...

i use one, it works not much better than a turbosmart ball and spring in my opionion, yet much better than all bleed type (needle valves) ive seen, it works instead of bleeding off excess boost it restricts boost from getting to the actuator by blocking it off till it has enough pressure at the ball to push back the spring

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

    • Meh, I think we're well into a new era of 90s JDM car. The days when spare engines and parts were cheap and plentiful are long gone. Therefore the YOLO approach is now massively difficult to justify, use and maintain. One should start to ponder whether an 800HP build is really justified, using stock parts. My thoughts? If you like/love the car and want to keep it and don't want to ruin yet another one, then be discrete about how much you ask from the stock parts. A 5 or 600 HP build is still a very fast car. If you want to go silly, have to have the 1000HP territory, then just drop all your cash, buy billet everything (or PRP cast block, etc etc) and use a bigger/more modern gearbag, and put a massive retrofit diff and axles into it. If you ruin any of those things then you're either ham fisted and deserve it, or you're pushing waaaay too far for the stock stuff anyway. The (presumably) young guys who are buying 30-35 year old busted arse Jap refugees and thinking they can live the life that was lived by others 20 years ago are deluded. Expectations need to be adjusted somewhat.
    • Just don’t be silly enough to think it’ll never happen either 
    • I take it that you bought the centre to suit the GTR axles? As in there was a plan, not just somehow lucky that it worked? It all looks excellent, by the way.
    • New engine block time. Up to you whether you want to keep going down this road with this project. Unfortunately a lot of these cars are like this. The road to getting these cars into decent shape is long and not fun for reasons that you're discovering. 
    • Essay time. First things first, an RB running stock turbo and boost levels shouldn't get so bad as to stall from reversion if the recirc valve has been deleted. Should get a little fluffy and annoying, but in my experience, not so bad as to stall. Of course, every car is a bit different, so it remains possible that stalling will happen. So, running with no recirc valve is somewhat of an option, for otherwise stock stuff. Atmo BOVs cause all sorts of shit, even on an otherwise stock setup. Only gets worse the higher the boost and the bigger the turbo. At that point you really need to go for a different ECU and no AFM. Rebuilding the stock recirc valve configuration is not hard. You just need a stock or aftermarket BOV with the appropriate adapter for the 2 bolt flange on the back of the J pipe, and to get/make an appropriate ~1" pipe to get the air back to the turbo inlet, and to possibly modify the inlet (if it is not stock) to take the recirc pipe back in. Not hard. Just takes some cutting and welding. Putting an R35 type AFM into the car anywhere is not as simple as just buying the AFM and throwing it in. You will also need to buy the appropriate boss that will then need to be welded onto the pipe where you're installing it. You can clearly see why by looking at the photo posted above. They are not a "simple" swap for a stocker. You can't put on in place of the stock AFM. You can put one in place of the stock AFM, if you get the mounting boss and weld it to some pipe and otherwise make that pipe piece work like the stock AFM housing. Or you can buy such an adapter, either complete with the 4 bolt flange for the air box, or without, for varying degrees of work needed to then make it fit your stock airbox or some pod filter or whatever you have going on. Oh, and the R35 AFM is not plug and play. The wiring is different, but changing that is trivial. The plug is also different so you either end up repinning the original wires onto the new plug, or you just use a short adapter. If you weld a boss to the cold side pipe, the cold side pipe really wants to be 3", otherwise the scaling on the meter can get a bit weird, but whatever the pipe size, it's not as easy as just using the (fully documented in the Nistune doco) simple method for choosing R35 AFM in X" pipe size in the software, because the scaling will already be a bit different. Anyway, all of this has been comprehensively worked through on the Nistune forums, so there is full knowledge available. I would use a Link/Haltech before I would bother putting an AFM into a cold side pipe. That's a lot of effort for a bodge. Nistune is great, can work well even at fairly high power levels, but you are stuck with the limitations of it being the stock ECU, which includes needing to use an AFM, which is not always convenient for every set of modifications. You have to have a think about what you already have, what you want to have, and decide early if you'd be better off jumping ship to an aftermarket ECU. This so you don't waste time and money doing things 2 or 3 times. Never heard of ECUmaster. Sounds like a backyard operation. If there are good tuners for it where you are, and it is a solid product, then it will be fine. We're only talking about an R engine here. Back in the day they all ran on crude nasty early 90s ECUs and they were fine. You don't need a rocket surgeon's ECU to run one.
×
×
  • Create New...