Notice: We request that you don't just set up a new account at this time if you are a previous user.
If you used to be one of our moderators, please feel free to reach out to Chris via the facebook Outerlimits4x4 group and he will get you set back up with access should he need you.
Recovery:If you cannot access your old email address and don't remember your password, please click here to log a change of email address so you can do a password reset.

TURBO VS BLOWER

Tech Talk for Suzuki owners.

Moderators: lay80n, sierrajim

Posts: 2296
Joined: Thu Oct 24, 2002 4:30 pm

TURBO VS BLOWER

Post by OVERKILL ENG »

Just curious as to what people would prefer either a turbo or blower kit for there Sierra.
SAM
OVERKILL ENGINEERING
www.overkill4x4.com
Posts: 6411
Joined: Tue May 27, 2003 11:49 pm
Location: Brisbane Australia

Post by Beastmavster »

Personally I'd prefer a bigger engine than either.... still beggers can't be choosers I suppose.

I guess it depends on whether or not they have A/c and P/s... makes a supercharger fitment much harder for space.
Posts: 426
Joined: Sat Jan 31, 2004 11:28 am
Location: batemans bay

Post by xtreem »

A small Eaton M45 would be good. power straight off idle. With injection of course.
Posts: 2817
Joined: Fri Feb 21, 2003 10:10 pm
Location: Hellbourne again

Post by bigsteve »

Supercharger, its gotta be better for the low speed work wehere the turbo engine heats up
yeshemesh
Posts: 333
Joined: Thu Apr 24, 2003 3:10 pm
Location: Cairns, effenque

Post by mike »

bigsteve wrote:Supercharger, its gotta be better for the low speed work wehere the turbo engine heats up

Wot he said, although thinkin 'bout it I'm pretty happy with the power outa the 1600
If it's already been thought of...
There has to be a better way...
Posts: 4
Joined: Thu Mar 04, 2004 8:46 pm
Location: Perth

it's better to be Blown!!

Post by Sharkbait »

there are two suzuki mudracers that i have seen race against each other
1 is powered by a radical holden 253 with the exhausts exiting straight thru the bonnet and the other is a 1300 supercharged and i have seen the blown 1300 kickass at several meetings.

The bonus with superchargers is you have power from ldle and a turbo needs a load to buildup boost.
Posts: 426
Joined: Sat Jan 31, 2004 11:28 am
Location: batemans bay

Post by xtreem »

Yes a 4wd situation is the only place a supercharger is better than a turbo. On the road or a race track the Turbo is miles ahead.
Posts: 125
Joined: Sun Nov 23, 2003 4:54 am
Location: Seattle, Washington

Post by mtzook »

I had a belt-driven supercharger a few years ago (about the size of an alternator), and i think it was off a subuaru or something. Anyway, i never went forward with putting it into the 1.0L LWB i had, so i resold it, but at that time, it looked like it would be very simple to install.

I've never been in or seen a s'charged 1.3L, so i don't know what they run like, but i do know that the turbo in my current lwb is awesome.

Does anyone know what the difference feels like between the 2?
My tires were rubbing in the front, so I trimmed the hood, and now they're fine...
Posts: 1663
Joined: Mon Nov 04, 2002 6:38 pm
Location: bethania QLD

Post by oozuk »

But if you pick the right turbo with the correct efficency range for your engine then you will have boost off idle too
Trying to finish the Zook

OOZUK buildup
http://www.outerlimits4x4.com/viewtopic.php?t=80949
***KING OF BLING***
Posts: 426
Joined: Sat Jan 31, 2004 11:28 am
Location: batemans bay

Post by xtreem »

OOZUK you can get the turbo working pretty good if it is sized properly but you will never get it boosting as early or as smooth as a roots (positive displacement) style blower.

MTZOOK. I have never seen a super charger as small as a alternater but it was probably a small powerdyne supercharger which are not positive displacement units and are a centrifigal design, they are more like a belt driven turbo but not nearly as good, the boost comes on much later than the roots style and they have major issues with chewing out bearings if you run any decent boost.
Posts: 2296
Joined: Thu Oct 24, 2002 4:30 pm

Post by OVERKILL ENG »

Mt ZOOK I think I know the blower you are talking about as I have one now that we are making brackets up to fit to a ZOOK.Should have it on and running for easter.I was just asking the question to see if it is worth making kits or not.
The blower is off a Subaru.
SAM
OVERKILL ENGINEERING
www.overkill4x4.com
Posts: 1781
Joined: Fri Jan 17, 2003 6:44 pm
Location: Central Coast NSW

Post by Midget »

Hey sam,
What model subaru is the blower off??

Jamie
Team 4x4 Specialist 005
Proudly Sponsorsed By
WWW.MAXXIS.COM
WWW.STAUNPRODUCTS.COM
COUNTRY WIDE MECHANICAL
Thanks to
WWW.OPW.COM.AU
WWW.DOBBINENGINEERING.COM
Posts: 654
Joined: Mon Oct 27, 2003 1:24 pm
Location: singleton

Post by CHOPZUKI »

supercharger would be a lot less hassleand better at low rpm :armsup:
DRIVE IT!!!!!
Posts: 266
Joined: Sun Jul 13, 2003 7:56 pm
Location: Gold Coast

Post by Bazooka »

I agree a supercharger would be better off for low down idle torque.
A small turbo could also reliably be set up in the same way but wouldnt quite get the instant response of a supercharger.
A supercharger would probably cost a lot less to setup as a kit apposed to a turbo where you need a custom exhaust manifold making it quite expensive.

Ahh what the heck, just twincharge it. :finger:
Posts: 125
Joined: Sun Nov 23, 2003 4:54 am
Location: Seattle, Washington

Post by mtzook »

Sam,

I realised straight away you were figuring out whether to make kits or not. When i got that small supercharger, i figured it would be easy to make it work, but just didn't know how well it would work.

I figure if you could get those to run pretty well, then it would be a quick, cheap and easy install for people to buy. Just mount in place of the A/C is what i was thinking at the time....

Let us know how it works out with the one you're working on.

P.S. Sold mine for $500. (i made money on the sale)
My tires were rubbing in the front, so I trimmed the hood, and now they're fine...
Posts: 125
Joined: Sun Nov 23, 2003 4:54 am
Location: Seattle, Washington

Post by mtzook »

What's the deal with the Suzuki Cappucino? Were they blown and turbo'd?? How did they run whatever setup they had in the 900cc's or whatever it was??
My tires were rubbing in the front, so I trimmed the hood, and now they're fine...
Posts: 426
Joined: Sat Jan 31, 2004 11:28 am
Location: batemans bay

Post by xtreem »

No way would you mount it in place of the aircon.
Posts: 148
Joined: Tue Dec 03, 2002 9:03 am
Location: Blue Mountains, Sydney

Post by stephen »

What's the deal with the Suzuki Cappucino? Were they blown and turbo'd?? How did they run whatever setup they had in the 900cc's or whatever it was??


Michael you are thinking of a Nissan March MA10 1 litre turbo and supercharged.

I would not bother with a supercharger I don't see the point. efi with series 3 rockhopper is more than enough for low range crawling and then on the open road, fire trails and mud the turbo is awsome. It does not get hot at all when it's just idling round.
Posts: 83
Joined: Mon Dec 30, 2002 11:17 am
Location: Townsville, Qld, Australia

Post by qten »

Overkill,
I'd probably be keen for a supercharge upgrade for my 1300. As mines a stocker and i've been looking for something to give it some extra boot for a little less money then a 1600 replacement.


mtzook any more info on your turbo 1300 would be sweet as well :D

ps: i've had a supercharged roots style commodore and i used to love the power from idle :D :D :D

Cyas,
Qten
Qten,
The Original Guzi Airlines, YC2004
__
__/ . \_
|____.__)
- (0) (0) ---------------------------
Posts: 6411
Joined: Tue May 27, 2003 11:49 pm
Location: Brisbane Australia

Post by Beastmavster »

I seriously looked at the supercharger options - there's lots of source systems most commonly the 4AGZE and 1GGZE's but it you're non-EFI you'd proably be as well off doing a 1.6 EFI swap, both financially and for the power.

Any turbo without injection or at least LPG is gonna be a compromise anyway (although it is HEAPS cheaper to do it that way).

In my case I'd have to either convert to EFI, or obtain another suitable carby (eg Weber sidedraft) - my Vitara carby is not perfect anyway and isn't gonna work real well on a blowthrough arrangement. Either would easily double the cost of supercharger installation.
Posts: 3076
Joined: Wed Nov 19, 2003 7:09 am
Location: web wheelin' from sydney

Post by stumped »

mtzook wrote:What's the deal with the Suzuki Cappucino? Were they blown and turbo'd?? How did they run whatever setup they had in the 900cc's or whatever it was??


have a look thru greg's buildup and stuff, he's running the lil cap engine... turbo intercooled, got a feeling it was round 660cc's, but really have no idea bout size :roll:
___,,,,_('o')_,,,,____
part of the newy conspiracy...
Posts: 2817
Joined: Fri Feb 21, 2003 10:10 pm
Location: Hellbourne again

Post by bigsteve »

stumped wrote:
mtzook wrote:What's the deal with the Suzuki Cappucino? Were they blown and turbo'd?? How did they run whatever setup they had in the 900cc's or whatever it was??


have a look thru greg's buildup and stuff, he's running the lil cap engine... turbo intercooled, got a feeling it was round 660cc's, but really have no idea bout size :roll:


660cc is correct, the reason it works is becuase the vehicles (both the cap & gregs car) are really light
yeshemesh
Posts: 3269
Joined: Mon Nov 25, 2002 1:11 pm
Location: melting gears

Post by greg »

bigsteve wrote:660cc is correct, the reason it works is becuase the vehicles (both the cap & gregs car) are really light


I think the other reason it works is because it has a lot of gears, so you can drive slowly with enough revs to get onto boost :cool:
DMA Founding Member #1 - Now Retired
Posts: 56
Joined: Sun Nov 02, 2003 10:55 pm
Location: Adelaide South Australia

Post by dark matter »

qten wrote:Overkill,
I'd probably be keen for a supercharge upgrade for my 1300. As mines a stocker and i've been looking for something to give it some extra boot for a little less money then a 1600 replacement.


mtzook any more info on your turbo 1300 would be sweet as well :D

ps: i've had a supercharged roots style commodore and i used to love the power from idle :D :D :D

Cyas,
Qten


I'm the same as qten, I also drive a stock sierra and would love the extra power early that a supercharger would give.

What kind of price range would a supercharger cost?
Last edited by dark matter on Mon Apr 05, 2004 9:54 pm, edited 2 times in total.
96 GQ Patrol, TD42, snokel, 2" OME suspension
Posts: 14
Joined: Sun Oct 20, 2002 8:31 pm
Location: Auckland, New Zealand

Post by kiwilux »

We run a Supercharged Rover V8 (3.5L) over the ditch (NZ),

Simple, Reliable, cheap, and HEAPS of power from down low

Supercharger: Toyota 4AGZE, a dime a dozen (cheap), overdriven to hell (1.5) (bigger cubic inches of the rover, 3.5L compared to 1.6L MR2)
Fuel: Dedicated LPG, second hand mixer equipment (cheap)
Throttle body: Japanese, Nissan, almost free from most wrekers (cheap)
Some bracketry required depending on mounting and pulleys
Some home made plumbing and your up and running.

The benefits of running LPG thru the blower (which gets hot from compressing the O2) is it cools the blower.

Note !! Pays to have a "blowoff"valve (homemade) inline to prevent "bad things" happening in the event of a backfire or overboosting.

Hope this helps...........

Id rather be blown than injected any day !!!
Mike
Posts: 2910
Joined: Thu Jan 02, 2003 4:32 pm
Location: Brisbane

Post by -Mick- »

Think it is a great idea :D Just a mild application @ 4 - 5 lbs boost or something which will let you go a decent speed for a good price, and can be tuned up by the individual later if they wish.

Would you incorporate efi also :?: Much more expensive I realise but big benefits

It would need to come in well under the cost of say a vit conversion but that should be quite possible I'd think. A S/C injected 1.3 would go plenty fast for a zook :lol:

Keep us posted :D
Posts: 3076
Joined: Wed Nov 19, 2003 7:09 am
Location: web wheelin' from sydney

Post by stumped »

efi and supercharger for less than a vit swap would be a very nice kit, i reckon i'd be keen for a bit of that action :armsup:
___,,,,_('o')_,,,,____
part of the newy conspiracy...
Posts: 754
Joined: Wed Jan 21, 2004 11:57 am
Location: Tumut, NSW

Post by Barathrum »

efi and supercharger for less than a vit swap would be a very nice kit, i reckon i'd be keen for a bit of that action


me too :D
Posts: 3269
Joined: Mon Nov 25, 2002 1:11 pm
Location: melting gears

Post by greg »

Barathrum wrote:
efi and supercharger for less than a vit swap would be a very nice kit, i reckon i'd be keen for a bit of that action


me too :D


I was thinking the same thing... And i guess that the vitara swap is what this product would need to beat - either in power, or in price.
DMA Founding Member #1 - Now Retired
Posts: 3076
Joined: Wed Nov 19, 2003 7:09 am
Location: web wheelin' from sydney

Post by stumped »

greg wrote:I was thinking the same thing... And i guess that the vitara swap is what this product would need to beat - either in power, or in price.


or both :armsup:
___,,,,_('o')_,,,,____
part of the newy conspiracy...
Post Reply

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 47 guests