Estima Owners Club
Google
 
Estima Owners Club

Go Back   Estima Owners Club > Open Forum > Performance Modifications

Notices

Performance Modifications Performance Questions, Comments and Discussion

Reply
 
LinkBack (2) Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 3rd May 2008, 12:50 PM   2 links from elsewhere to this Post. Click to view. #1 (permalink)
Club Member
 
ClintJ's Avatar
 

Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Sydney Australia
Posts: 135
ClintJ is on a distinguished road
Default Garrett GT2052V for my lucida

Hey there everyone. I couldnt let this one pass. A variable turbine nozzled garrett from ebay and for a paltry some of only $136 AUD delivered..
Well it hasnt arrived yet but It will be overhauled and some mods made to the compressor housing around the inlet where the leading compressor blade edge is.
By machining a slight lip out of the housing so that the gap is bigger around that front blade allows a slightly higher boost pressure to be produced in the surge zone of the compressor map...
To explain compressor surge is exactly like cavitation of a ships propellor. Try to spin it to fast at a slow speed and the prop vibrates or effectively cant push any water until you slow the prop back down..
Same with the turbo compressor. Try to produce boost to early in the rev range with a compressor wheel that isnt designed to produce flow at that pressure and the compressor wheel goes into surge... By having a gap machined around the leading edge allows some of surge to be put of because the air can slip out to the side instead of trying to be compressed...
This turbo has come of a 3lt nissan turbo diesel
For those who dont know about variable turbine nozzles, then there are plenty of places to look for info like wikipedia or youtube for models..
But basically there is a set of vanes that control gas speed to the turbine by opening and closing. Make the gap small and the exhaust gas speed is high making the turbo speed up quickly. Open the gap up and the gas speed will slow down on the turbine wheel but as engine rpm gets higher you want less packpessure and higher flow rates so this turbo offers the best of both worlds.
That is quick to spool up to full boost and good exhaust flow at high RPM so that the engine power doesnt tapper off.
ClintJ is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 5th May 2008, 09:03 AM   #2 (permalink)
Club Member
 
ClintJ's Avatar
 

Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Sydney Australia
Posts: 135
ClintJ is on a distinguished road
Default

Turbo arrived today and is in tip top shape... Must say that it is much smaller than the RB20det turbocharger currently on there and the RB20 turbo produces 8psi at 2000rpm so the GT2052V should almost double that bringing full torque on low in the rpm range...
ClintJ is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 5th May 2008, 02:35 PM   #3 (permalink)
Club Member
 
ClintJ's Avatar
 

Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Sydney Australia
Posts: 135
ClintJ is on a distinguished road
Default

Here are some more pics from the pulled down turbo..
I think that everyone will get an understanding of how VATN variable area turbine nozzle setups will work after this...



Vanes are open

Vanes are almost shut

ClintJ is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 5th May 2008, 11:05 PM   #4 (permalink)
JJ
Area Representative
 
JJ's Avatar
 

Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Newark, Notts
Posts: 919
JJ is on a distinguished road
Default

Hi Clint, is this something you know that is going to work or yet to be tested?
JJ is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 6th May 2008, 12:07 AM   #5 (permalink)
Club Member
 
ClintJ's Avatar
 

Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Sydney Australia
Posts: 135
ClintJ is on a distinguished road
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by JJ View Post
Hi Clint, is this something you know that is going to work or yet to be tested?
Hi JJ, yes it works. VATN turbos have been available on diesels mainly for the last 6 or 7 years.. just about any modern diesel engine has a Variable turbine turbo on it..
From my analysis work the compressor comes close to surging but my machining work that I will do will combat this.
I will take my existing manifold that I made and chop of the existing flange and weld on the new flange for the GT2052..
Should be good.. Not as peaky as the RB turbo but good enough for the torquey nature of these engines
Clint
ClintJ is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 8th May 2008, 04:36 AM   #6 (permalink)
Club Member
 
ClintJ's Avatar
 

Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Sydney Australia
Posts: 135
ClintJ is on a distinguished road
Default

Here is a vid from youtube that shows how the vanes work.

ClintJ is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 15th May 2008, 08:05 PM   #7 (permalink)
JJ
Area Representative
 
JJ's Avatar
 

Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Newark, Notts
Posts: 919
JJ is on a distinguished road
Default

Hi Clint we are looking in to a bigger turbo not big as in big just say next size up etc .......JJ
JJ is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 16th May 2008, 04:46 AM   #8 (permalink)
Club Member
 
ClintJ's Avatar
 

Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Sydney Australia
Posts: 135
ClintJ is on a distinguished road
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by JJ View Post
Hi Clint we are looking in to a bigger turbo not big as in big just say next size up etc .......JJ
If you want to stick with the toyota turbo's then they come in the following sizes.
CT9 lucida std turbo
CT12 toyota 1GGTE twin turbo 2lt petrol (bigger turbine but smaller compressor
CT12A 1JZGTE twin turbo 2.5lt petrol Bigger turbine and compressor, ceramic turbine wheel and very free flowing whilst also responsive.
CT12B 2JZGTE bigger turbine and compressor again ceramic turbine.
CT26 3SGTE 2lt petrol. Big twin scroll turbine housing bigger turbine and compressor. Would be ok for the second turbo on a 2stage turbo setup. The CT9 as the primary and the CT26 as the larger more efficient secondary.
Of course there is a multitude of turbos out there to choose from...
If I wanted outright power and fuel economy then I stick with my RB20 turbo on the van now.
If I want more torque in the low end with not as much topend as the rb then the GT2052V is good enough for me! There are some more potent or larger turbined variable turbos out there.
Basically the the garrett code GT20 means a T2 turbine, the larger the number the larger the turbine.
The 52 means 52mm on the major diameter of the compressor wheel.
The bigger the turbine wheel is will mean more power at the cost of lag.
ClintJ is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 26th May 2008, 01:34 PM   #9 (permalink)
Junior Member
 

Join Date: May 2008
Posts: 18
abnfto is on a distinguished road
Default

Hi Clint, you look like a bit of a turbo expert!
I was wondering, what sort of boost pressure would you expect to see from a standard 3CTE engine and turbo . I fitted a boost gauge to mine last weekend and am seeing 5-6 psi under typical cruise conditions. If I floor the accelerator from 50mph and the engine revs hard, the maximum I have seen is around 8.5psi. I don't see much boost at all at lower speeds / revs.
The reason I ask is that under acceleration there is a lot of black smoke (poorly burnt fuel) coming out of the exhaust and I wondered if the turbo boost was low such that the fuel to air ratio was higher than it should be. On my petrol engined cars, the Air Flow Meter would compensate for low boost but I haven't spotted such a meter on the Estima so I presume the amount of fuel injected is based mainly on throttle position and coolant / air temperature readings.
Thanks for any help, Robert.
abnfto is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 30th May 2008, 02:08 AM   #10 (permalink)
Club Member
 
ClintJ's Avatar
 

Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Sydney Australia
Posts: 135
ClintJ is on a distinguished road
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by abnfto View Post
Hi Clint, you look like a bit of a turbo expert!
I was wondering, what sort of boost pressure would you expect to see from a standard 3CTE engine and turbo . I fitted a boost gauge to mine last weekend and am seeing 5-6 psi under typical cruise conditions. If I floor the accelerator from 50mph and the engine revs hard, the maximum I have seen is around 8.5psi. I don't see much boost at all at lower speeds / revs.
The reason I ask is that under acceleration there is a lot of black smoke (poorly burnt fuel) coming out of the exhaust and I wondered if the turbo boost was low such that the fuel to air ratio was higher than it should be. On my petrol engined cars, the Air Flow Meter would compensate for low boost but I haven't spotted such a meter on the Estima so I presume the amount of fuel injected is based mainly on throttle position and coolant / air temperature readings.
Thanks for any help, Robert.
Hi Robert, there are great number of things that will cause a diesel to smoke..
Your boost is on the sweet spot for the toyota manual. It states 7~9psi.
Smoky reasons
Dirty or out of adjustment injectors or pump
Dirty air filter
Stuffed water temp, map or air temp sensors.
Buggered EGR valve( do a search on here for that one)
My first best guess would be to make the egr inoperative.
Then look at the injectors for a service.. Or try some injector clean through them...
The map sensor will only add more fuel as boost comes on unless of course the sensor is faulty and reading high but this is at the far end of the spectrum. Electronics seem to always outlast mechanical components so the injectors would be the likely culprits..

Clint
ClintJ is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply

LinkBacks (?)
LinkBack to this Thread: http://www.estimaowners.com/community/performance-modifications/5315-garrett-gt2052v-my-lucida.html
Posted By For Type Date
Estima Owners Club - Powered by vBulletin This thread Refback 5th June 2008 11:59 PM
Estima Owners Club - Powered by vBulletin This thread Refback 4th June 2008 09:04 AM


Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 08:16 PM.




This site is brought to you courtesy of The Toyota Estima Owners Club. (T.E.O.C)
Disclaimer: This is not an official Toyota site and is not affiliated to Toyota in any way. Visit the Official Toyota website.
The views and opinions expressed on this site are those of individual contributors and not necessarily those of the T.E.O.C. unless otherwise stated. Whilst every reasonable effort is made to ensure the accuracy of all material published, The T.E.O.C. cannot accept liability for loss or injury resulting from any error, misstatement, inaccuracy or omission contained herein.
The publishing of an advertisement on this site does not imply endorsement by The T.E.O.C. of any person, company or product and no liability will be accepted in respect thereof.
All trademarks and copyrights remain property of their respective owners.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.7.2
Copyright ©2000 - 2008, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Content Relevant URLs by vBSEO 3.1.0
Copyright © Toyota Estima Owners Club 2004- 2008. All Rights Reserved