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Turbonut
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Twin plugging is obviously beneficial to turbo engine. Where did you take it that turbo engine is low comp? Yes, low static CR but boost effectively making it very high CR engine and whatever type of pistons you have it still halves the time needed for the flame front to travel meaning you need less advance and you have much better resistance to knock (because knock treshold moves further from MBT).
IMO best bang for the buck mod for 3.2 is turbocharging it, no contest. As noted above the trick is to spare poor 915, you could do this by controlling boost electronically depending on gear to reduce torque in 1st and 2nd gears. And no, there is no need to purchase EBC kit for that (along with WBO2 kit, EGT kit, knock kit etc) as you can buy VEMS PnP for the price of two or three of any of those mentioned and have it all in one box.
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'83 924 (2.6 16v Turbo, 530hp),'67 911 hot-rod /2.4S, '78 924 Carrera GT project (2.0 turbo 340 hp), '84 928 S 4.7 Euro (VEMS PnP, 332 HP), '90 944 S2 Cabriolet http://www.facebook.com/vemsporsche |
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Registered
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Don't forget oil cooling upgrades if you do not have at minimum a Carrera cooler.
One of these days I'll get around to making a list of all the parts I required for the turbo build but I'm actually quite terrified at how much I have spent doing it (and that's on top of the almost $15k I spent on rebuilding the engine).
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-Jayson 1976 911S Signature Edition - 3.2SSt (JE 98mm 9.5:1 pistons, 964 Cams, Carrillo Rods, ARP Head Studs, AASCO Valvetrain, 3.2 Carrera Manifold, ID725's, B&B Headers, TS HyperGate45 Gen V, TS RacePort, BW S360, AEM Infinity 506, E85) IG: Signature_911 |
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Registered Minimalist
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Yes I have ER finned cooling lines and a widemouth carrera cooler with a relay/fan.
@Raceboy, my ignorance is exposed! Makes sense, I was looking at the static compression ratios. Like I said I have a lot of research ahead. Conversations like these help immensely because it gives me a framework to start with.
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Duane / IG: @duanewik / Youtube Channel: Wik's Garage Check out my 75 and 77 911S build threads |
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Brando
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As far as twin plugging NA: the dome of real high compression pistons have a bit of an problem to go around as opposed to a flat area free of angles or obstacles. Twin p[lugging puts a spark on each side of essentially two areas....
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Turbo powa! 1977 911s. it's cool |
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Crotchety Old Bastard
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The 915 is just fine paired with a mild turbo build, just as I did with the SC/930 in my signature line below. 350whp with short 915 gears, narrow body tires and a curvy road would be a riot! You also would not need a big oil cooler or intercooler. Go big and you need a 930 4spd and a lot of expensive add-ons to support the power. Both are great fun, which way you go depends on what you want out of the car and your budget.
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RarlyL8 Motorsports / M&K Exhaust - 911/930 Exhaust Systems, Turbos, TiAL, CIS Mods/Rebuilds '78 911SC Widebody, 930 engine, 915 Tranny, K27, SC Cams, RL8 Headers & GT3 Muffler. 350whp @ 0.75bar Brian B. (256)536-9977 Service@MKExhaust Brian@RarlyL8 |
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Registered
Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: Los Angeles
Posts: 2,571
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The current motor is a 3.2 with 8.5:1 compression, 964 cams, and a K27 backed by a euro 915 with LSD. Works great. Before that it was a stock 3.0L non-intercooled motor...went about 150K miles on that one...daily driver...went cross country twice...never missed a beat. I still think he’s be better off with a 3.6 |
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Brando
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I agree with Brian, a mild turbo boost pressure engine with short ratio 915 gearbox is an absolute blast! However knowing that you can safely raise the boost for more power becomes an ever increasing reality that you want to realize after time. If you are diligent and can control your boostaholic urges, you can stay below 7 psi and the transmission will be fine. All that being said, I went through to 915 gearboxes at Stock 930 boost pressure (.8bar).
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Turbo powa! 1977 911s. it's cool |
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Chain fence eating turbo
Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: Austin, TX
Posts: 9,115
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Intercoolers have gotten so cheap, that buying an eBay special and having it adapted to a 911 doesn't cost that much. Many here have done it.
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Cory - turbo'd '87 C3.2 Guards/Blk, 3.4, 7.5:1 CR P & C's, 993SS cams, Borg-Warner S366 turbo @ 1.2-1.5 bar, depending on mood ![]() |
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This is really helpful, thank you!
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Tell me more about Vems. My 915 is non LSD, what are the implications, if any, of that in terms of adding a turbo setup? Quote:
For non IC setup, is it worse in extreme heat environments? I'm in Vegas and I drive my car in the summer months. Ambient temps can get to 110. I also sort of want to use the new wing I just installed. It's a glass whale grafted to a steel decklid, so no immediate room for an IC unless custom like some I've seen stuffed up into the top of the bay. I also like switching to my stock decklid since it's generally a better look with super skinny hips. What 930 oil pump am I looking for? Are there core trade opportunities for my stock 3.2 pump? When I send my case to Ollies, ( I spoke to Zack last week) I need to specify 930 squirters? Are they just higher flow? whats the dif? Any other case mods I should be aware of? Is the scavenge line (like gravity feed on 3.0) strictly a 3.0 conversion thing? Does that relate to my build in any way? This is exciting, I think I'm sold on the conversion. Now I just need to start my own sunglasses company to finance my new habit. *uhhh TurboKraft intercooler....DROOL..... I think I'll call my company Turbo Shades. How does that sound? :-D (Totally kidding - Ordered me some boosted shades last week!)
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Duane / IG: @duanewik / Youtube Channel: Wik's Garage Check out my 75 and 77 911S build threads Last edited by 75 911s; 01-19-2018 at 05:34 AM.. |
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Join Date: Dec 2015
Posts: 104
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- The best part is making a video series and writing off the entire turbo conversion as an advertising expense. Thanks for the support by the way, good luck on your journey!
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Registered
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‘Like your way of thinking.
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Jesper Carrera 3.0 1975 930 1978 OEM Matte Schwartz, ANDIAL IC, BL WUR, SC cams. LMA-3 w. XD-16 and CP transducer www.stauningwhisky.dk |
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Crotchety Old Bastard
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Mild turbo build would not require much more than an exhaust change and intercooler. You already have the SC /Carrera cams, Motronic EFI and C/R to create good torque and drivability. Add my tuned headers and a GT30 or like quick spooling turbo with large intercooler then tune the EFI with a chip and fuel pressure mod. Add posi, bearing retainer and HD side plate to the 915. Oil tank will need a mod if using a return line. That’s about it. Crazy fun. But if the big power bug hits you a tranny change will be needed along with suspension brakes and everything else to support the power.
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RarlyL8 Motorsports / M&K Exhaust - 911/930 Exhaust Systems, Turbos, TiAL, CIS Mods/Rebuilds '78 911SC Widebody, 930 engine, 915 Tranny, K27, SC Cams, RL8 Headers & GT3 Muffler. 350whp @ 0.75bar Brian B. (256)536-9977 Service@MKExhaust Brian@RarlyL8 |
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tough choice ... my only comment is the boost is addictive. No doubt about it! I ended up with my boosted / modded 930 almost by mistake. A dude needed the cash and I bought it with the intention of flipping it for a tidy profit. Well, love the thing. If I don't get stupid and buy a GT3 ... I will be buried in this!
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Brando
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Turbo powa! 1977 911s. it's cool |
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Registered Minimalist
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So sounds like with my stock components on my car (ie manual brakes and 915) I might be best served putting the 3.2 back together fresh with existing Mahle 9.5:1 compression and running mild boost on that. Still a 8k proposition but better than 15k and no need to go power crazy on such a light car. Especially after coming off a tired old 2.7.
That could be the most economical approach. It's not future building though, so If I decide to increase boost I would need to later do a top end and swap out the pistons. Maybe I can preplan a bit and upgrade the case, pump and rod bolts/studs as planned anyway. Any problem with running a turbo pump in there on the stock pistons. By the way, I have no harness, no motronic, I suppose I could source a harness and stock manifold.
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Duane / IG: @duanewik / Youtube Channel: Wik's Garage Check out my 75 and 77 911S build threads |
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Brando
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Sense you’re already in there I’d go with lower compression.
Yes you’ll have a giant smile with only .4 bar compared to even an sc3.0
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Turbo powa! 1977 911s. it's cool |
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Registered
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You should buy my 79 rebuilt turbo EFI motor and 4 speed that I have in my Carrera so I can put a 3.2 back in it.
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John- 78 Slick Top 930 "Illegitimi non carborundum" |
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Turbonut
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![]() One would still need WBO2 kit and when putting all things together it will almost make amount that you could buy VEMS PnP for and it already has WBO2, works on stock sensors and you can use proper injectors without any hack jobs. What amazes me is that when it comes to building engine itself, people do not hesitate coughing up few thousand just to get 0.2 liters of more displacement (which is pintless performance wise) and yet trying to save few hundred when deciding whether buying proper ECU vs using Motronic with hackjob...Can you explain me this please?
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'83 924 (2.6 16v Turbo, 530hp),'67 911 hot-rod /2.4S, '78 924 Carrera GT project (2.0 turbo 340 hp), '84 928 S 4.7 Euro (VEMS PnP, 332 HP), '90 944 S2 Cabriolet http://www.facebook.com/vemsporsche |
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My favorite is the investment in titanium lug nuts to lose a pound in unsprung weight, but meanwhile, the driver gains 20lbs over the year. We see it over and over in similar performance car forums -- where sinking $$ into rebuilding an engine "to be more robust" produces minimal improvements in performance, compared to relatively simpler changes. Trying to find a human behavioral explanation for this, I think it has something to do with the satisfaction of knowing something is technically and engineering-wise more robust, and thinking that dollars-spent equates with peace of mind. I admire the enthusiasm, thinking and planning that is being put into this. Will be interesting to see where this project is in one year, or whether it succumbs to economics, job-related-requirements, relationship problems, newer shinier objects, or just project fatigue. |
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Regarding gaining 20lbs..yes we all face that problem, the titanium lugs reference is funny. I actually rejoined the gym about 4 months ago and have been working on myself and I think working on my car inspired me to work more on my own body! :-D Finally, I'm also fascinated by threads with big projects. I'm a forum junkie and It's crazy to check that first post date and see how long projects actually take. Many of course never get finished. I like bumping those threads and providing positive comments to see if I can kickstart them again. You never know how a small bit of encouragement can re-ignite enthusiasm. In my build thread I talk about one of my core philosophies (regarding the car) is to keep it drive-able. No matter what mods I do, I plan out medium to small projects, complete them and then drive the car again. It keeps motivation up. Buying this core was a great opportunity to keep my car running but to solve the long term problem of the 2.7 needing a rebuild. Though I can't predict what the future will bring, I think the main thing that will see the project through is the joy that I'm getting out of the whole process, whether it be building, research or just interacting with the community. I came into my car project about 3 years ago with basic mechanic skills. I never thought I could rebuild a precision engine on my own. I've gained confidence in my skills by tackling various projects on my 911 of varying difficulty. This engine build will be the culmination in my mechanical skill set. Luckily I have a lot of help from you fine folks who have the experience I lack. :-) ![]()
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Duane / IG: @duanewik / Youtube Channel: Wik's Garage Check out my 75 and 77 911S build threads |
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