Mundgyver said:I am not trying to stir the pot here but I do have a question for clarification on the terms pre and post.
In my mind Pre Turbo is between the cylinder head and the turbo in the exhaust manifold and Post Turbo would be after the turbo on the down pipe side.
Is this everybody's understanding? I only ask this because the following statment make me wonder
The pre temperature can be below 250F and the post can still be in the low to mid 300F's.
I do not have two gages but I do have my probe in the exhaust manifold between the cylinder head and the turbo and understand this to be the PRE position.
I guess I am having a hard time grasping the pre below 250F and the post of 300F's.My understanding also is that you loose about 100* of temp for every couple of inches you move down the exhaust system. So how would the down pipe be hotter than the exhaust manifold
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Am I making sense here, or have I missed something![]()
Sorry I should have been more clear. My pre turbo T/C is installed in the exhaust manifold cylinder 6,5,4 side common tube. My post turbo T/C is installed in the port provided in the Banks exhaust brake, which is essentially the exhaust elbow. As I recall it is about 1 inch downstream of the flange.
You are correct. For normal running you do see 100F to 300F higher temperatures pre turbo than post turbo. I was talking only cooldown by the statement:
The pre temperature can be below 250F and the post can still be in the low to mid 300F's.
I should also explain this a bit farther when I talked about exhaust gas temperature and metal heat soak temperature. Again, I am only talking cooldown mode. For example, believe it or not, I have noticed that at infrequent times the post EGT will actually increase in temperature when the engine RPM is dropped to idle. Not by a whole lot, maybe 10F - 30F. Keep in mind the Banks brake has more metal mass than a stock elbow.
This makes me think that the post T/C is reacting primarily to EGT if the flow rate is higher. When the exhaust gas flow rate is lower, like at idle, the metal temperature close to the T/C has a greater effect. At any rate the pre EGT has to be cooler for some time, the length determined by engine load prior to going to idle, before the post EGT approaches the same temperature. Hence 250F pre turbo, which is about my lowest EGT that I see after the engine is warmed up.
If you feel like it, check out this TDR thread and read some more of my confusing blabber and the enlightening comments that follow by other members.

Jim
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