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Competition blowoff valve question...

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Competition Name this truck:

Competition Ft. Myers/ Wauchula Florida Diesel Pickup Sledpull

kantdrive55 said:
it will release that pressure to atmosphere then close up right again saving the turbo.



You dont happen to have any sound clips or video w/ sound one of your turboguards, do ya?? Never heard one I dont think and just curious to what they sound like.



thanks, mike
 
kantdrive55 said:
What happens is you have all this exhaust being generated by your engine. That is spinning the turbocharger. The charger is then taking intake air and pressurizing it and sending it through the intercooler then into the engine. When you get off the throttle quickly you no longer have any exhaust driving the turbo, but you still have pressurized air on the intake side. This pressurized air is looking for the easiest way out, which is not into the engine. It will actually try to spin the turbo backwards, which can cause the shafts to break. The turbo gaurd we have is hooked up between the intercooler and the intake. When you back off the throttle quickly it will release that pressure to atmosphere then close up right again saving the turbo.





Isn't this the very definition of a "blow off valve"?
 
How do you know if you need them or not? Would a manual truck need it more than an automatic truck? Or can you just control it with your right foot and try not to ever jump out of the boost that fast?
 
GOT-Torque said:
Would a manual truck need it more than an automatic truck?





Id say yes,

A stick truck would need it more than a auto. because an auto can shift quicer than a stick (obveisly) and when YOU shift your letting off the pedel which inturn stops the drive pressure.



Correct??



Michael
 
the whale dog said:
not to steal the thread but what damage is done when the turbo barks on sudden letoff of the throttle?

This could happen :-laf :-laf :-laf

Michael

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Last edited by a moderator:
The Turboguard will give you poor acceleration in a manual truck since it blows all of your boost away during every shift. If your running a larger then stock turbo thats a major PITA. I have a friend that took his BD turboguard off his truck and its now sitting in a box. It took him many hours to dial it in so it would work properly. Yes it worked but he couldn’t live with the lost in boost every time he shifted.



He said it would probably work just fine in an auto since you don’t have to let off during acceleration.



BTW its not a simple bolt on application. It take some fabing and testing and re-shimming to get it to work properly
 
Michael at Hot Rod Diesels installed mine a few weeks ago. I am satisfied with it. It is definitely not a simple install. There is quite a bit of fab work needed. Cut, weld, paint the valve itself into the intake tubing. Then there is a lot of wiring, tubing, relay, controller to get connected, then mounted and controller ran into the cab. Then you have to tune/adjust the controller for your specific truck and your specific perferences. Glad I did not tackle the job.



Mine does stop most of the barking I had. Mainly accelerating onto freeways or traffic and then letting off. That use to irritate me. It does not stop all barking however. If you are at full throttle through OD lockup mine will still bark. There is no TPS backoff to trigger the BOV.
 
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