TurboMinivan
Still plays with cars
- Location
- Lehi, UT
Your fabrication skills are beyond reproach, and my hat is off to you.
However:
This (somewhat common) misconception is completely incorrect, and it will lead to your engine's demise if you follow through with it. Your OEM speed density setup has no way of seeing any pressure above ambient, nor can it see the additional airflow a compressor provides... which means you won't get any additional fuel when needed. Even a mere 3 psi will be pushing about 20% more air molecules down your throttle body, which is sufficient to wreak havoc with your air/fuel ratio and cause damage. I remember laughing at a number of STS early adopters who threw a turbo on their LS1 F-bodies but didn't alter their fuel system "because the mass flow sensor will do that automatically"... only to watch their engines detonate and blow up at low single-digit boost. (One guy didn't learn, spent big bucks rebuilding his engine, then blew that one up again for the same reason.)
Please don't do this.
However:
3psi won't need anything.
This (somewhat common) misconception is completely incorrect, and it will lead to your engine's demise if you follow through with it. Your OEM speed density setup has no way of seeing any pressure above ambient, nor can it see the additional airflow a compressor provides... which means you won't get any additional fuel when needed. Even a mere 3 psi will be pushing about 20% more air molecules down your throttle body, which is sufficient to wreak havoc with your air/fuel ratio and cause damage. I remember laughing at a number of STS early adopters who threw a turbo on their LS1 F-bodies but didn't alter their fuel system "because the mass flow sensor will do that automatically"... only to watch their engines detonate and blow up at low single-digit boost. (One guy didn't learn, spent big bucks rebuilding his engine, then blew that one up again for the same reason.)
Please don't do this.