Nothing you do changes compressor efficiency. That is done by changing compressor wheels or bleeds. Changing turbine housings ALWAYS changes turbo efficiency and/ or pressures, even to the point of similar numbers. A 16cm wastegated and plugged will make different boost and spool than a 16cm non-wastegated. Everyone changing wheels, face pitch, leading edge or role pitch, bleeds, etc. are trying to change the MAP range and pressure AT A GIVEN RPM (30psi at 48,000rpm instead of 62,000rpm or whatever). That will cause a slight MAP change, but does it matter? Turbo MAP efficiency is nothing more than keeping the turbo below a certain RPM, as to not make more compressor heat than boost. Super heating the turbo takes running over the MAP for so long that the ATAAC "heat soaks" and ceases to cool inlet air. Has no real detrimental affect on the turbo itself at all. If it takes 50psi+ or whatever to role down the road for extended periods, it may be time to reconfigure more than the turbo anyway. The only thing that really kills a turbo is so many RPM the wheel splits (105,000rpm- 120,000rpm+), a balance problem or shaft/ bearing coking in which the turbine pushes too hard trying to spin the compressor, thereby twisting the shaft. No one has done the hardest and most obvious turbo saver. A bigger shaft. Increase shaft size and you can put any compressor wheel on that you desire. Mid 60's would be easy, and more than that would be possible (sea level/ cold dry day). The real deal would be variable venturi turbines. Big money, but better than twins for road trucks... Whoops; sidetracked :-laf I believe the original reference was to changing turbine housings. End result is about 2- 2. 2psi drop per size. 30psi with a stock 12cm would be 25+ with a 16cm, with a 200degree (or so) correlating drop per size (hot side) in EGT's over 30psi boost or 1000*(i. e. 1350* would then be 950*/ 1000* hot side)... T