Dieselmore
New member
OK gotcha, yeah the heaviest spring they offer on most of these gates, was like 20lb spring.
Because I'm controlling the amount of drive pressure I have...not boost.
I use on board air because it's an endless, and constant supply...never have to worry about how much pressure is in the bottle, etc, etc.
I got tired of trying this spring, and that spring...
Now I just type in what I want to see, and it happens with a simple touch of a couple buttons.
That's missing a critical piece of information though.. Was the gate able to relieve enough drive pressure by itself or was he still seeing dangerous drive pressure numbers that twin gates solved?
If that single gate wasn't enough then it makes sense that drive pressure would skyrocket on the bank without a gate.
Why would you use drive pressure to control the gate instead of boost?
Even if you reduce drive on only one bank the pressure equalizes in the turbo, it's actually really effective.
I have seen a scenario where I used that same thought process and I couldn't have been more wrong.
Setup had a divided turbine housing and only one side was gated. We had bp gated down to 70 psi. We thought everything was great, til the engine failed. After repair we put a BP gauge on both pipes trying to see why we killed the last engine. 70 psi on the gated pipe and 120 psi on the non-gated pipe.
If using a divided housing you must gate both pipes somehow, it doesn't happen in the turbine housing, at least not enough to count on it. Either you use two gates or you divide the pipes all the way to the wastegate seat. Charlie Keeter's experience mirrors mine.
All of the above are certainly possible.. And I think I have one of those examples you spoke of (very quick spooling vgt) but I'm not experiencing those issues. My 6.7 with dual stroker pumps, injectors that flow more than a 400cc 6.0 injector and a 66mm vgt turbo, I have never had an issue keeping the gate closed. I don't think there's a 6.0 that spools faster than this and the gate doesn't burp on me.
With that said, I'm not necessarily disagreeing with you. CO2 and an electronic boost controller is the ultimate in control, I just don't think it's necessary for dieselmore is trying to accomplish.
If it's in the budget, go for it.
If using the factory up pipes, could the EGR connection be used?
Problem is on a 6.0, there's not a lot of room for a wastegate on both banks. Only good way I can think of doing it right off the exhaust manifolds and dumps to the ground
Correct, 90 degrees is not optimal. I believe it's something like 30-45 degrees angle, which my thought was off the exhaust manifold/header could be an effective location to do soI have both sides into one gate on my setup.
It's tight...but very do-able.
Having a gate that is 90* off from the flow path is a very very poor gate design, and won't do the job required. (Like Tadd mentioned.)
Think about it this way...how does a sand blaster setup work?
You stick a hose into a pail of sand, and the air blowing across the sand pick up line creates a vacuum...picking up the sand...
So tell me...how good is the waste gate that uses the egr port any different?