bcl Toughest BA Turbo Lifetime Members 3,408 Member For: 22y 2m 4d Gender: Male Location: Sydney Posted 16/04/04 11:57 PM Share Posted 16/04/04 11:57 PM Guys,A common technique is to increase the spring pressure in the wastegate diaphram when running higher boost pressure, rather than replacing the spring with a heavier tension spring (as I have in my car). You can increase the spring pressure by effectively shortening the arm by the following methods:1. bending the wastegate arm …. Very crude2. cutting the arm, cutting off some of the length, then rewelding3. use an adjustable arm (APS do this with their stage 3; refer to http://www.airpowersystems.com.au/falcon/actuator.htm ) The major disadvantage that I can see with the above is that you may restrict the total length of movement of the wastegate arm, so your wastegate swing valve may not open as far, possibly restricting wastegate flow (I have used methods 2 & 3 above in the past).A better approach is to use a higher tensioned spring, if you can source one.Brian Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
igsta Member 371 Member For: 21y 4m 19d Gender: Male Location: Sydney Posted 17/04/04 08:55 AM Share Posted 17/04/04 08:55 AM Bending the actuator arm was a mod done to alot of older turbos. It was a way of fooling the motor. On boost air passes the actuator so you dont over boost. By bending the arm the engine thinks it is boosting a certain psi but you actually get more boost through the turbo rather then the actuator. I think it is much better to fool the engine by using a bleed valve, where a small amount of escaping air from a hose going to the actuator, increases alot more psi. Both these mods cant be done to our T as the computer over rides this. Gone are the days where a bleed valve as little as $50 could give you an extra 20kw. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
slapnut Member 216 Member For: 20y 11m 7d Location: Siddie Posted 17/04/04 11:27 AM Share Posted 17/04/04 11:27 AM igsta Posted on Apr 17 2004, 06:55 PM Bending the actuator arm was a mod done to alot of older turbos. It was a way of fooling the motor. On boost air passes the actuator so you dont over boost. By bending the arm the engine thinks it is boosting a certain psi but you actually get more boost through the turbo rather then the actuator. I think it is much better to fool the engine by using a bleed valve, where a small amount of escaping air from a hose going to the actuator, increases alot more psi. Both these mods cant be done to our T as the computer over rides this. Gone are the days where a bleed valve as little as $50 could give you an extra 20kw. I agree! Bending anything on our beloved T's is sacrilege. Sounds like a mod better suited to carby fed, non computerised, turbo cars.. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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