^^^^^^^ WHSIn all the years we've been selling Garrett turbos I've only seen two GTP38R's come back for warranty claims. One had dried silicone in the oil supply port, the other had a aftermarket wheel installed ( batmowheel IIRC ). Balancing individually is one thing, but after you assemble those parts the assembly will not be balanced as a whole just because each individual part was previously balanced separately. Once you bolt two of those parts together the balancing goes out the window. The proper way, and IMO the only acceptable way is to balance them as an assembly. And all this really means is taking your compressor wheel and turbine wheel, putting them together and balancing them as so. Make a reference mark on the compressor wheel and the shaft so when they go back together you know where to index the compressor wheel on the shaft as it was when balanced.
Really, thread?
Ball-bearings are more susceptible to debris in your oil and it's scarily common for me to hear from a customer "I bought this turbo because it's indestructible" because no one told them that while the 38R will go forever, it does have a weakness. Debris. Anything that will cause those ball bearings to seize and stop... just like a stick in the roller blade.
Wheels are already balanced before they're assembled in the turbos. Garrett builds them the same way. They don't take the whole turbo after it's built and then "balance it". They literally balance all the parts individually (including your stock wheel) and then assemble. That really loud sound that comes from the 38R and annoys your wife? That's due to it's balancing specs or really, the lack there of.
I've had a small handful of claims over the past year (but our sales also went up over the past 1-2 years, too) each has come back as ingestion. You can't hide the scarring from debris on your internals.
As I think about this...I wonder if the significant weight difference between the exhaust wheel and the billet wheels puts additional stress on the shaft regardless of whether it's been balanced or not. Might be way off base in my thinking...
Seems there would be more "down force" on the exhaust side bearing from more weight on that end of the shaft and more "up force" on the billet wheel side bearing.
My cast 38r wheel was noticeably heavier than the 38r WW2 and D66WW2. That's only reason the thought came to mind.
Just depends on the application and who's wheel, it goes both ways at times.
Really, thread?
Ball-bearings are more susceptible to debris in your oil and it's scarily common for me to hear from a customer "I bought this turbo because it's indestructible" because no one told them that while the 38R will go forever, it does have a weakness. Debris. Anything that will cause those ball bearings to seize and stop... just like a stick in the roller blade.
Wheels are already balanced before they're assembled in the turbos. Garrett builds them the same way. They don't take the whole turbo after it's built and then "balance it". They literally balance all the parts individually (including your stock wheel) and then assemble. That really loud sound that comes from the 38R and annoys your wife? That's due to it's balancing specs or really, the lack there of.
I've had a small handful of claims over the past year (but our sales also went up over the past 1-2 years, too) each has come back as ingestion. You can't hide the scarring from debris on your internals.
Sorry if I missed it, but to the OP, does your truck have forged rods?
Really, thread?
Ball-bearings are more susceptible to debris in your oil and it's scarily common for me to hear from a customer "I bought this turbo because it's indestructible" because no one told them that while the 38R will go forever, it does have a weakness. Debris. Anything that will cause those ball bearings to seize and stop... just like a stick in the roller blade.
Wheels are already balanced before they're assembled in the turbos. Garrett builds them the same way. They don't take the whole turbo after it's built and then "balance it". They literally balance all the parts individually (including your stock wheel) and then assemble. That really loud sound that comes from the 38R and annoys your wife? That's due to it's balancing specs or really, the lack there of.
I've had a small handful of claims over the past year (but our sales also went up over the past 1-2 years, too) each has come back as ingestion. You can't hide the scarring from debris on your internals.
Interesting information, I have been to Turbonetics and went on a full tour of the facility. I saw the machine where they did a balance after assembly. I am not sure exactly what they did for balancing pre-assembly. They ground on the wheel in the area of the nut with a grinder to establish a balance. I am trying to remember if my 38r had those same grind marks.
That really loud sound that comes from the 38R and annoys your wife? That's due to it's balancing specs or really, the lack there of.
I still haven't heard EVERYTHING yet, but you just got me a LOT closer
you can't be serious with this :doh: