TurboMinivan
Still plays with cars
- Location
- Lehi, UT
Hmmm... @TurboMinivan might like to see that.
Indeed.
This car will be an '86 at the newest, as that was the final year for the Chrysler Laser. Engine-wise, there were significant year-to-year changes, so it would be good to know exactly what you're starting with.
and from my research 300 hp is not out of the question with them.
No, it is not... provided you're using the right bottom end hardware. 1986 introduced the light-weight connecting rods, and they will pretzel at only 19-20 pounds of boost. No good. Also, the 1986 (and earlier) cars used the early block (ie, with the weaker bottom end that can allow the crank to move around at high power).
Overall, you could classify the turbo Mopar engines into these three categories:
- 1984-1988 2.2L TurboI -- cast crank, iffy block/rods, weakest bottom end available by far
- 1987-1988 2.2L TurboII -- forged rods and crankshaft, some block improvements
- 1989+ 2.2L TurboII/TurboIV and 2.5L TurboI -- still forged crank (on 2.2L) and forged rods, but substantially stronger block
Trying to coax 300 HP out of the first category is begging for trouble, but the second category can handle it just fine and the third category would give you a very healthy margin of safety. At that point, tuning becomes critical--the weakest link is almost always the pistons, as they will melt/destruct from going lean and/or too much timing.
After that, we've got to start talking about transmission strength.