What I'm about to expound on is only my opinion...
Personally I have my thermocouple mounted post-turbo. Eventually, I will also have one pre-turbo (when I get my ATS manifold some day). I believe there are 2 purposes for monitoring EGTs:
1. To avoid coking the oil in the turbo bearing compartment resulting in damage upon restart.
2. To avoid melting down an internal component of the engine.
Every single turbo vehicle on the road is susceptible to #1. In my *opinion* only people in "odd" circumstances are susceptible to #2. So what does "odd" mean? I mean people who tow very heavy at high altitudes in the mountains; or people who have a power-enhancing device; or people who have some internal fault in their fuel system that causes an over-fueled condition (example - stuck open injector).
So why was post-turbo the first gauge I put on? Well, the biggest reason is I'm too chicken to drill the manifold with the turbo in place and since I've always planned on an ATS manifold it would be easier to keep the stock manifold in nice condition as a "spare" and drill the ATS when I get it. Other reasons include the fact that I have no power enhancing devices, I don't tow anything, and my primary goal is monitoring the turbo.
The pre-vs-post argument is as old as time. The above is only my opinion, take it or leave it. I respect those who choose pre-turbo, and those who choose post-turbo. The best option is the one you research yourself and decide independently what to do!
On edit:
Here's
a good thread that discusses it (read down a bit).
-Ryan
