Re: Re: Re: Not beneficial to all trucks??
Originally posted by rkubicki
Ok, there are three things happening in the sudden lift scenerio that are worth mentioning:
1 - The engine decelerates, it does not instantly drop to idle... This can take up to 1 second to happen.
2 - While the engine is slowing down, it is not stopping its flow, there are still intake and exhaust cycles being performed. . Granted the engine's flow capabilities are a function of its speed but there is still positive pressure at the exhaust port that is working on the turbine blades.
3 - As the engine decelerates so does the turbo, retarding its output and moving out of its range of peak efficiency... Boost pressure does not remain constant in these conditions.
Having said that, the engine intake port will always be the point of lowest pressure, no?... . Its like trying to fill a bathtub with a bucket while the drain is open. . I would think you'd have to have a very large compressor on your engine before that would become a problem... By then backflow would be the least of your problems. 
If the engine is still flowing air how could the turbocharger actually spin backwards??... You have a 5. 9L "air compressor" feeding from whats left of any intake pressure and discharging through the turbine housing... Compound this with the forward inertia at the turbo's shaft.
It scares me to hear folks mention removing or tampering with their wastegates... Wastegates serve a very important purpose - they prevent the turbo from overspeed which could cause compressor surge or turbo and/or engine failure!!
Turbos are designed to operate in a peak speed range depending on the characteristics of the compressor... If you overspin a turbo by defeating the wastegate you get to a point where the compressor's efficiency begins to fall... If not controlled, efficiency drops off and the compressor surges (becomes unstable) - Could this possibly be the "bark" you are hearing??
- Rob
Nice response.
1. I agree with number 1.
2. The positive pressure on the turbine blades (exhaust side) is less than the air pressure on the the engine side of the compressor blades. Yes, there is still air being bled off, but not fast enough. Keep in mind that this whole problem is caused by excessive pressure in the system.
3. Correct again.
The intake is the point of lowest pressure because it is "pulling" the air. But using your analogy of trying to fill a bathtub with a bucket while the drain is open... . you are right. However, pour a five gallon bucket of water into a bathtub with the drain open. Water will be standing as it attempts to drain from the small drain (intake valves). Now do it with ten gallons immediately poured in. The small drain has a finite amount of liquid that it will past. If it had some other place to go, it would go there instantly, rather than wait for that small drain to clear. Same with the intake valves.
The forward inertia of the turbine/compressor shaft is not enough to combat the sudden burst of reverse pressure built in the system.
The bark is a result of instability in the system. Backspin is a result of a large mass of air under high pressure impatiently trying to find a new home.
Don't just think about pressure/volume. Convert that to mass. At 20 psi boost, out engines are moving 40 lbs of air/min. At 40 psi, they are moving 63 lbs/min. However, the volume is constant. Every two revolutions the engine takes in 5. 9 liters of air, no matter what the pressure. It's when you get this large mass of air with no place to go (not enough intake room to match production) that you get this instability and reverse air flow.
I am not a proponent of tampering with wastegates. But for those that race, this is a serious problem (backspin) because it will wring off the turbine shaft. There's not enough "space in the sytem to get rid of this mass of air. So if you put a blow off valve in, you bleed it into free space outside the engine.
BTW, when I first started working on this, I found that a 3/8 line was sufficient to bleed off enough air to stop the problem. It would do it in milliseconds. Why? Because it is only bleeding off what the engine can't take during the intake cycle. This is a very fast operation. The speed that it has to work is part of the reason the parts cost so much.