trigmk2
New Member
- Posts
- 2
- Location
- West country
Evening all,
I am in need of some help with re-plumbing my turbo and fitting a boost gauge to my '97 Disco 1 300TDI Auto.
Basically, I want to move the waste-gate line from the turbo outlet to the inlet manifold for that little extra poke, and use the turbo outlet to feed a boost gauge. I will be cleaning out the intercooler piping (might replace in the future) and getting somebody with a great deal of experience in diesel fuel pumps to tweak the fuelling.
I have read up a lot and as I understand; there is a loss of 0.2-0.3 bar from the turbo outlet to the manifold due to the the intercooler pipework, which means that the mainfold will only actually see ~0.7 bar of the 1.04 bar that the turbo *should* be producing. By moving the pipework you can get closer to 1.0 bar at the inlet and therefore a little more get up and go, at the expense of making the turbo work a little harder.
As has been mentioned in multiple places, there is a fitting in the rear of the inlet manifold., I have found this fitting, but unlike anybody else I appear to have a sensor there already... A little investigation has shown this to be an air temperature sensor. I have tried to follow the wiring, but it disappears behind somewhere with wiring from another sensor in the top of the head (I believe this is something to do with the EGR).
I had a look through some fittings that I had around me to try and tee out of the manifold so I could run the boost pipe to the waste gate and keep the temperature sensor in place. I wasn't able to find anything, and a trawl through Google / Ebay didn't throw anything up either.
Ideally I would use this to take a reading as otherwise I need to take the inlet manifold off so that I can tap a new fitting. On that note, nowhere have I read about people actually removing the inlet to drill and tap... surely you cannot do it in place as there is inevitably an amount of swarf that would then get sucked into the cylinders.
Has anybody else come across this? How did you get around it?
Thanks in advance
I am in need of some help with re-plumbing my turbo and fitting a boost gauge to my '97 Disco 1 300TDI Auto.
Basically, I want to move the waste-gate line from the turbo outlet to the inlet manifold for that little extra poke, and use the turbo outlet to feed a boost gauge. I will be cleaning out the intercooler piping (might replace in the future) and getting somebody with a great deal of experience in diesel fuel pumps to tweak the fuelling.
I have read up a lot and as I understand; there is a loss of 0.2-0.3 bar from the turbo outlet to the manifold due to the the intercooler pipework, which means that the mainfold will only actually see ~0.7 bar of the 1.04 bar that the turbo *should* be producing. By moving the pipework you can get closer to 1.0 bar at the inlet and therefore a little more get up and go, at the expense of making the turbo work a little harder.
As has been mentioned in multiple places, there is a fitting in the rear of the inlet manifold., I have found this fitting, but unlike anybody else I appear to have a sensor there already... A little investigation has shown this to be an air temperature sensor. I have tried to follow the wiring, but it disappears behind somewhere with wiring from another sensor in the top of the head (I believe this is something to do with the EGR).
I had a look through some fittings that I had around me to try and tee out of the manifold so I could run the boost pipe to the waste gate and keep the temperature sensor in place. I wasn't able to find anything, and a trawl through Google / Ebay didn't throw anything up either.
Ideally I would use this to take a reading as otherwise I need to take the inlet manifold off so that I can tap a new fitting. On that note, nowhere have I read about people actually removing the inlet to drill and tap... surely you cannot do it in place as there is inevitably an amount of swarf that would then get sucked into the cylinders.
Has anybody else come across this? How did you get around it?
Thanks in advance