Hi all,
I have isolated my truck's mysterious power loss to my turbo. I had been calling it a de-fueling, since I thought it was a sudden loss of fuel, but I have since found the problem is somewhere in my turbo.
In short, at WOT maximum acceleration, at about 2000 RPM, after a few seconds of hard pulling, suddenly the engine felt like it just quit. Then, after maybe 3 - 5 seconds, with the pedal kept on the floor, the engine just picked right back up and accelerated as expected again. I tried a new Comp box, switched to a new fuel filter, tried a new MAP sensor, cleaned my IAT sensor. All did nothing. Someone suggested it may be a turbo problem, since when everything cut out, all of a sudden my boost gauge showed a vacuum (like -10 PSI), maybe the wastegate was opening waaaaaaay to soon. Bone stock HX40 set to 43 PSI.
So, I got out my allen wrenches and adjusted the set screw in my adjustable boost elbow to the fully closed position. I figured this would basically cause the wastegate to never open. Well, another WOT run down the freeway, the power cut out didn't occur until around 2700 RPM, and it lasted only about 1 second, instead of 3 - 5 seconds.
This seemed promising, so I pulled the boost elbow, and checked it to see if in fact it was sealing solidly. I blew into the end of the elbow, and it was still allowing a tiny amount of air to get through the elbow, so I replaced it with a solid plug in the turbo so there was absolutely ZERO air going to the wastegate actuator. After several more WOT freeway runs, I now have absolutely no power cutting out. I am able to make 39 PSI on the boost gauge with the Comp on 2x3 in all gears, so it appears I have finally solved this nasty problem.
My question is - It seems that the problem is in fact with the wastegate mechanism. If I get the turbo off, is there anything in the wastegate mechanism that can be adjusted, or is it such that the wastegate is toast and now I have the excuse to upgrade to a B1


Thanks,
Tom
I have isolated my truck's mysterious power loss to my turbo. I had been calling it a de-fueling, since I thought it was a sudden loss of fuel, but I have since found the problem is somewhere in my turbo.
In short, at WOT maximum acceleration, at about 2000 RPM, after a few seconds of hard pulling, suddenly the engine felt like it just quit. Then, after maybe 3 - 5 seconds, with the pedal kept on the floor, the engine just picked right back up and accelerated as expected again. I tried a new Comp box, switched to a new fuel filter, tried a new MAP sensor, cleaned my IAT sensor. All did nothing. Someone suggested it may be a turbo problem, since when everything cut out, all of a sudden my boost gauge showed a vacuum (like -10 PSI), maybe the wastegate was opening waaaaaaay to soon. Bone stock HX40 set to 43 PSI.
So, I got out my allen wrenches and adjusted the set screw in my adjustable boost elbow to the fully closed position. I figured this would basically cause the wastegate to never open. Well, another WOT run down the freeway, the power cut out didn't occur until around 2700 RPM, and it lasted only about 1 second, instead of 3 - 5 seconds.
This seemed promising, so I pulled the boost elbow, and checked it to see if in fact it was sealing solidly. I blew into the end of the elbow, and it was still allowing a tiny amount of air to get through the elbow, so I replaced it with a solid plug in the turbo so there was absolutely ZERO air going to the wastegate actuator. After several more WOT freeway runs, I now have absolutely no power cutting out. I am able to make 39 PSI on the boost gauge with the Comp on 2x3 in all gears, so it appears I have finally solved this nasty problem.
My question is - It seems that the problem is in fact with the wastegate mechanism. If I get the turbo off, is there anything in the wastegate mechanism that can be adjusted, or is it such that the wastegate is toast and now I have the excuse to upgrade to a B1



Thanks,
Tom