OK, just a quick thought:
For the longest time we have read about how a set of twins will always spool slower than the smallest charger it has. We know this is true.
BUT-- we were theorizing that this is because the smaller charger has to pull air through the big charger on the intake side, and there's a partial vacuum in the crosstube as the smaller charger spools before the big charger.
I'm thinking that it's not the INTAKE side at all that has to do with the slower spoolup.
It has to be the exhaust side. Think about it. The small charger spools because of pressure differential (well, temp too, but mostly pressure). That why we often notice better spoolup on a single charger when you install larger exhaust-- the reduced "downstream" pressure of the larger exhaust INCREASES the pressure differential across the turbine--- thus, it spools faster.
But what if we went the opposite direction? What if we installed another restriction AFTER the single charger? What about another turbine section??
Well, now the pressure differential across the small turbo is LESS because of pressure built up in the hot crosstube between small charger turbine large charger turbine side.
So the irony here is that if you build some twins with say, an HT3B and install a really tight housing on the HT3b to help spoolup-- you may instead be actually HURTING spoolup (at least of the small turbo).
So adjusting the size of the larger charger's turbine housing is basically just shifting the spoolup lag from the small charger to the larger charger and vice versa?
Larger HT3B housing= faster small charger spoolup, slower big charger spoolup
Smaller HT3B housing= slower small turbo spoolup, faster large turbo spoolup.
I remember noting how Jim Fulmer was posting back in the day about how his 40 spooled pretty well even with a BB on bottom. It makes sense-- the BB is big enough to not be much restriction after the 40s turbine.
At least, that's how it appears to ME.
So, Jim-- you need to get a B-52 under the SPS66-- your BB may be too small
For the longest time we have read about how a set of twins will always spool slower than the smallest charger it has. We know this is true.
BUT-- we were theorizing that this is because the smaller charger has to pull air through the big charger on the intake side, and there's a partial vacuum in the crosstube as the smaller charger spools before the big charger.
I'm thinking that it's not the INTAKE side at all that has to do with the slower spoolup.
It has to be the exhaust side. Think about it. The small charger spools because of pressure differential (well, temp too, but mostly pressure). That why we often notice better spoolup on a single charger when you install larger exhaust-- the reduced "downstream" pressure of the larger exhaust INCREASES the pressure differential across the turbine--- thus, it spools faster.
But what if we went the opposite direction? What if we installed another restriction AFTER the single charger? What about another turbine section??
Well, now the pressure differential across the small turbo is LESS because of pressure built up in the hot crosstube between small charger turbine large charger turbine side.
So the irony here is that if you build some twins with say, an HT3B and install a really tight housing on the HT3b to help spoolup-- you may instead be actually HURTING spoolup (at least of the small turbo).
So adjusting the size of the larger charger's turbine housing is basically just shifting the spoolup lag from the small charger to the larger charger and vice versa?
Larger HT3B housing= faster small charger spoolup, slower big charger spoolup
Smaller HT3B housing= slower small turbo spoolup, faster large turbo spoolup.
I remember noting how Jim Fulmer was posting back in the day about how his 40 spooled pretty well even with a BB on bottom. It makes sense-- the BB is big enough to not be much restriction after the 40s turbine.
At least, that's how it appears to ME.
So, Jim-- you need to get a B-52 under the SPS66-- your BB may be too small

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