dragracer238
New member
- Joined
- Dec 18, 2007
- Messages
- 16
Whats the difference and what are the advantages to each?
I'm not a turbo genious by any means, but I was told that boost is more a measure of head restriction, than actual airflow. That being said, wouldn't parallel turbos both pushing 50psi(lets say 1000cfm each) perform just as well as a compound setup with a initial boost of 50psi(at 1000cfm again) and a larger pushing it to a total of 100psi? Would double the boost equal double the airflow? I know what chargers you use reflects directly on CFM/boost, but wouldn't parallels spool faster than compounds with the same CFM? Or am I missing something? I realize V-motor vs. Inline motor throws another variable in there too....McRat said:If you want more than 50PSI gauge boost, you need to start shopping for compound twins. Singles are lousy at going past 5:1 Pressure Ratio, which is 60PSI at the gauge.
With compound twins, the first charger builds boost from outside air, then the second charger takes that air and builds it more. It's the only way to go past 70PSI that I know of.
Parallel twins probably has little application in diesel racing other than packaging. Any advantage you get in spoolup is pretty much pointless. You are even more limited with peak boost with small chargers. The big chargers are the ones with good high pressure ratio performance. This is why the Banks truck will not do well without nitrous IMO.