We had some interesting results from our 6.7 2015 powerstroke billet wheel testing. We have been trying different designs to see how much more power we can squeeze out of the stock turbo.
Test Truck: 2011 f250 with 2015 turbo and 2015 HPFP. Truck Source Diesel & Off-Road tuning and No limit Cold Air intake
Blue was our baseline with a stock turbo. It spooled the quickest, which is impressive because billet wheels are often known for spooling faster that stock... well 1300ft/lbs of tq at 2000rpms is borderline of what most feel is comfortable as safe for the bottom end of these trucks. Our focus with our billet wheel was to try and move the power band up and to the right (AKA more hp, NOT more low end tq). The stock wheel ran SUPER clean in the mid range but fell off quick in the upper rpms and would start to smoke heavy and lose power.
Red was an 11 blade single plane design. It hardly changed anything... added a little tiny bit of power on the top end, but honestly you could not even tell anything was different by the seat of your pants.
Green was a 6x6 design which did exactly what we wanted, moved the HP up and to the right. It was only a 12hp gain at PEAK hp to bring us up to 594hp but was a significant hp gain on the top end. On the top end of the graph you can see it gained almost 50-60hp in the upper rpms. You could definitely feel the difference when driving the truck. The slight bit of turbo lag was almost non-existent with the TSD tunes, but the top end power was easily noticeable. The top end smoke output was reduced to just a lite haze. Another interesting part is this wheel has a slight intake turbo whistle to it that we really liked.
As the truck sits now:
Billet wheel 2015 turbo, 2015 HPFP, TSD tunes, No limit intake
594hp
1203tq
Test Truck: 2011 f250 with 2015 turbo and 2015 HPFP. Truck Source Diesel & Off-Road tuning and No limit Cold Air intake
Blue was our baseline with a stock turbo. It spooled the quickest, which is impressive because billet wheels are often known for spooling faster that stock... well 1300ft/lbs of tq at 2000rpms is borderline of what most feel is comfortable as safe for the bottom end of these trucks. Our focus with our billet wheel was to try and move the power band up and to the right (AKA more hp, NOT more low end tq). The stock wheel ran SUPER clean in the mid range but fell off quick in the upper rpms and would start to smoke heavy and lose power.
Red was an 11 blade single plane design. It hardly changed anything... added a little tiny bit of power on the top end, but honestly you could not even tell anything was different by the seat of your pants.
Green was a 6x6 design which did exactly what we wanted, moved the HP up and to the right. It was only a 12hp gain at PEAK hp to bring us up to 594hp but was a significant hp gain on the top end. On the top end of the graph you can see it gained almost 50-60hp in the upper rpms. You could definitely feel the difference when driving the truck. The slight bit of turbo lag was almost non-existent with the TSD tunes, but the top end power was easily noticeable. The top end smoke output was reduced to just a lite haze. Another interesting part is this wheel has a slight intake turbo whistle to it that we really liked.
As the truck sits now:
Billet wheel 2015 turbo, 2015 HPFP, TSD tunes, No limit intake
594hp
1203tq