turbo blanket? whats the deal?
#1
turbo blanket? whats the deal?
Does anybody have experience with these? I searched the threads but didnt see any info on them?
Heres the Ebay link :
http://cgi.ebay.com/ebaymotors/S300-...Q5fAccessories
Heres the Ebay link :
http://cgi.ebay.com/ebaymotors/S300-...Q5fAccessories
#3
Heat is good on the exhaust side; heat is energy, and it takes energy to spool the turbo. A turbo wrap keeps the heat in the exhaust gasses where it'll keep workin' pushing the wheel instead of allowing the heat to radiate out. It also helps keep underhood temps a little lower. I've got one on my truck (not one of theirs, a different company) and I love it. Even with my pump tweaked to 1/2 turn from runaway and seriously machined fuel pin, I still don't ever see over 1200*, and my pyro is pre-turbo.
#4
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Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: Waiahole, Hawaii (island of Oahu)
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I had a turbo wrap but took it off. EGT's took way longer to cool down and the pyro climbed faster. A friend of mine works at the shipyard and does insulation. He made the wrap for me because I saw it in Summit's catalog and thought I needed one. I don't know if it made a difference or not because I took it off after one day of driving due to the increase temperature on the pyro. I'm just sharing my experience.
#5
not to get off subject but whats the deal with that? should it be before or after?
I was told it was dangerous because if anything was to come lose it would go thru the turbo......where is the best reading taken from?
Mine was installed prior to me getting the truck pre-turbo.
I was told it was dangerous because if anything was to come lose it would go thru the turbo......where is the best reading taken from?
Mine was installed prior to me getting the truck pre-turbo.
#7
Registered User
not to get off subject but whats the deal with that? should it be before or after?
I was told it was dangerous because if anything was to come lose it would go thru the turbo......where is the best reading taken from?
Mine was installed prior to me getting the truck pre-turbo.
I was told it was dangerous because if anything was to come lose it would go thru the turbo......where is the best reading taken from?
Mine was installed prior to me getting the truck pre-turbo.
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#8
I had my turbo wrapped up on a boat I used to have. It was wrapped so it would not catch the boat on fire. The entire exhaust system was wrapped up. I never had a pryo but with a boat you are on the power all the time. Worked good with no issues.
#9
#10
Ive seen alot of discussion on this on the 2.2 mopar turbo forums I visit, and most guys say unless its not a drag car, dont do it because it can cause the manifold/turbo to crack due to the higher heat.
#12
Registered User
I would be hesitant to wrap the turbo, as it gets plenty hot enough as it is and could very well cook the oil if it was any hotter.
Not to argue, but the heat has nothing to do with spinning the wheel; that is done by the pistons forcing the exhaust out of the cylinders.
The turbo would spin just the same if the exhaust were ice-cold.
Not to argue, but the heat has nothing to do with spinning the wheel; that is done by the pistons forcing the exhaust out of the cylinders.
The turbo would spin just the same if the exhaust were ice-cold.
#13
Adminstrator-ess
Heat and pressure are tied together. You lose heat, you lose pressure. You lose pressure, you lose heat. That's why post turbo EGT is lower than pre-turbo. It's the gas law in operation.