I always get a chuckle out of the pre-post discussions because to me its a flat out no brainer for power enhanced trucks. Sure, when you operate under stock conditions (no mods) you can rely on Cummins data that says 300 degree differential temperature. My point is that there is not much margin left in the stock huffer, so when you add fuel, you easily push it outside of its operating map. ok, make sure you ask yourself: what does that MEAN? it means that you can no longer depend on that 300 degree differential temperature and you have to start directly measuring the things that matter -- exhaust manifold temps. think about it -- you have an air restriction where the turbocharger is the weak link (it cannot pass enough air). Well I dunno, what do you think will happen if the manifold temps were to rise very quickly in the presense of an air restriction not capable of exhausting enough air to cool things down? all of a sudden your post-turbo thermocouple is fat dumb and happy while your pistons are changing shape
Even if you place your thermocouple pre-turbo you have the following errors to account for:
1. precise placement is sometimes a compromise and an art. we can do pretty good at locating the install point, but no one really has proven where the hottest position is. that would require too many holes in the manifold

. individual pistons will differ according to how well balanced the injectors are, mechanical design of the engine, etc. ok, so allow 50 degrees for that.
2. Some theromcouples are fast, some are slow. beware and see TDR issue #34 page 20. You'd be surprised at who is near the bottom of the speed list. when you punch it, you don't want a lazy thermocouple to make you blind as to how quickly your EGT really rises. so allow 50 degrees for that. now we're up to 100 degrees in error.
3. some gauge faces themselves are faster than others. it takes time for that needle to get there. most gauges are fast, so we'll let this one slide
4. Some EGT gauge systems are inherently in error especially on hot days. Did you know that your EGT gauge does not actually measure the temp of the thermocouple probe? Thats right: it measures the difference between it and the "cold" end of the type-K wire. Beware of thermocouples that have ordinary copper wire under the hood. They can read as much as 100 degrees too cold if your engine compartment is hot. Its always best to have a long "type K" lead that terminates in the cab. What assumption for the temperature of the "cold" end of the thermocouple has your guage been calibrated with? One way to get around this problem is to put the "cold" end of the type-K wire in the cab and calibrate the gauge to expect that this cold temperature is 70 degrees. Then your measurement is accurate to within 10-20 degrees depending on cab temperature -- perferctly acceptable. The best way to avoid this problem is to use a temperature compensated gauge -- then your measurement is accurate to within a fraction of a degree. the worst way is to put the probe under the hood where the temperature of the "cold" end is all over the map. One EGT gauge manufacturer I spoke with ("cold" end under the hood) could not even tell me what assumptions they made in calibrating the gauge. I guess they figured no one would care to understand any of this.
So consider all the sources of error in the pre-turbo EGT gauge. at least 100 degrees for a reasonable quality guage, and 200 degrees for a slow one. then add another 100-300 degrees of error for the post-turbo install and ask: do you have anything that is meaningful for the purpose you intended?
