how much shaft play is considered too much?
will shaft play dramatically effect power? or will just burn oil when it gets bad enough?
thanks guys:thumbsup:
Printable View
how much shaft play is considered too much?
will shaft play dramatically effect power? or will just burn oil when it gets bad enough?
thanks guys:thumbsup:
It will affect boosting and can damage depending on how much play there is.
It can move up and down which is normal, but it should NOT move side to side much at all, if it even touches the housing at all its no good.
If there is too much movement the fins will get stripped on the housing and byby turbo
another dumb question..
If 2 turbos both produce 13 psi and on the same engine... and peak power is made at the same RPM... should the power output be identical?
Cause the turbo Im looking at has shaft play and will proabably need a rebuild, but i blades are scrapping the housing or anything like that, but the play is quiet a bit.. Could this hinder the power output provided that it is still producing the target PSI?
Take it to GCG or John @ Presission...
They'll be able to tell you if it needs to be rebuilt.
Some turbo's, Garret BB units in particular do have a bit of play which is normal.
Best if an expert has a look at it.
Re power @ 13psi...
If the turbo's are identical, the power should be the same.
If one is bigger than the other,
The larger one will generally out power the smaller unit with increased flow at the same boost.
No PSI is how much pressure not how much air
In a larger area you need more air to get to the same pressure in a smaller area.
Think of blowing through a straw. If the straw is bigger you need more blowing to get the same amount of pressure than you would a small straw.
Thus in a smaller turbo at specific PSI there is less air than a large turbo at same PSI
but say u if an external wastegate... independent to turbo..
u upgrade the turbo and run the same PSI...
Wouldnt the external wastegate open and the same air pressure and flow?
the external gate will still open at the same point, but thats irrelevant to how much air the turbo will have compressed to reach that point in PSI...
a smaller turbo has a smaller amount of space to compress air into.
a twice as larger turbo, would say, compress twice as much air to the same psi
so both turbos are producing the same PSI but the larger one is pushing alot more air.
more air = more power