compression for turbo application??
hopefully an easy question for someone out there.
this is my first turbo(T3/T4) so i need a little advice.
i have a b16a, just about everything has been upgraded (fuel, spark, blah, blah). in other words its ready for a turbo. i'm pulling the tranny and head off for a little work and i figure this is a prime time to do something to the bottom end. however with all this talk running around about stroking, overboring, forged/ high compression pistons, stock compression vs. low copression. i'm comfused as to what i really NEED to do.
i'm not building an all out racing engine just something more.
i want to be able to run the engine on 91 oct. if i can't oh well.
what kind of compression should i have?
to get that compression is it a combination of both the turbo piston and head gasket?
is a brand new stock piston just as beneficial as an aluminum?
please straighten this confusion out
thanks
this is my first turbo(T3/T4) so i need a little advice.
i have a b16a, just about everything has been upgraded (fuel, spark, blah, blah). in other words its ready for a turbo. i'm pulling the tranny and head off for a little work and i figure this is a prime time to do something to the bottom end. however with all this talk running around about stroking, overboring, forged/ high compression pistons, stock compression vs. low copression. i'm comfused as to what i really NEED to do.
i'm not building an all out racing engine just something more.
i want to be able to run the engine on 91 oct. if i can't oh well.
what kind of compression should i have?
to get that compression is it a combination of both the turbo piston and head gasket?
is a brand new stock piston just as beneficial as an aluminum?
please straighten this confusion out
thanks
Originally Posted by daddiodanger
should i use a stock head gasket with turbo pistons?
i've heard overboring isn't really necessary.
i've heard overboring isn't really necessary.
Overboring doesn't make as much of a difference as you think. The money could be spent elsewhere.
yes thank you.
is there a certain compression ratio to shoot for.
i was also going to have the block honed and balanced.
is there anything else that would be a good idea to get done to it?
is there a certain compression ratio to shoot for.
i was also going to have the block honed and balanced.
is there anything else that would be a good idea to get done to it?
if your going to go through the work of putting in new pistons i would def do a hone job on it just the clean up the cylinder walls...if you planned on running high boost having the rotating asembly balanced wouldnt be a bad idea. and as schmoo said if u have the money a sleeve job...it allows for alot more boost down the road
thats good info.
would balancing the rotating assemblies on a turbo engine be a bad idea because to keep the turbo spooling the engine needs stay rotating at high RPM's?? so would a lightened flywheel be a bad idea? if so i still have my stock one.
would balancing the rotating assemblies on a turbo engine be a bad idea because to keep the turbo spooling the engine needs stay rotating at high RPM's?? so would a lightened flywheel be a bad idea? if so i still have my stock one.
Originally Posted by daddiodanger
thats good info.
would balancing the rotating assemblies on a turbo engine be a bad idea because to keep the turbo spooling the engine needs stay rotating at high RPM's?? so would a lightened flywheel be a bad idea? if so i still have my stock one.
would balancing the rotating assemblies on a turbo engine be a bad idea because to keep the turbo spooling the engine needs stay rotating at high RPM's?? so would a lightened flywheel be a bad idea? if so i still have my stock one.


