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turbo exhaust heat
Moderators: toaddog, TWISTY, V8Patrol, Moderators
turbo exhaust heat
hello I recently fitted a geuine turbo to my 4.2 diesel patrol and the exaust gas temp keeps on rising above 500 degrees celcius when I'm towing a load and I have back off every time it gets close 550 D/C I'm still running 2 1/4 exaust system with a normal muffler. If I put a 2 1/2 system with mandrel bends and no muffler on my patrol will this help keep the temperature down or do I need an intercooler it has been tuned properly so fuel air mixture is spot on thanks.
Running it leaner will cut power, turbo requires more fuel, don't know how much for this engine or even mine for that matter but either way less fuel=less burn=less power.
No doubt that over fuelling will heat and possibly kill an engine though...
The idea of less fuel to cut engine temps would work but for what effect? Intercooler will help dramaticallycompared to a bigger exhaust though this will still aid it.
This is my knowledge anyway
No doubt that over fuelling will heat and possibly kill an engine though...
The idea of less fuel to cut engine temps would work but for what effect? Intercooler will help dramaticallycompared to a bigger exhaust though this will still aid it.
This is my knowledge anyway
[quote="fool_injected"]
I pity my brother when she is a teenager[/quote]
I pity my brother when she is a teenager[/quote]
Fuel screwed up to high but 550 isnt that bad though If it gets round the 6s then start to worry
Mine climbs to bout mid 5s when towing a big load but i just drive it to around 5psi on the gauge and not rev it to full boost and it comes back down.
Mine climbs to bout mid 5s when towing a big load but i just drive it to around 5psi on the gauge and not rev it to full boost and it comes back down.
Twenty4-7 Rock Racing
#247
http://www.mickeythompsontires.com.au/index.htm
#247
http://www.mickeythompsontires.com.au/index.htm
Intercooler cools inlet temp and wont make exhaust temp drop so much.
From what you have posted it sounds like your "std muffler"is restricting flow causing exhaust gas to heat up in the turbine.
Larger diamiter exhaust will help for sure but again if muffler/s are not hiflow it doesnt matter how big your exhaust is you will have hi temp's.
Also dump pipe(pipe off the turbo housing) must/should be following the straightest possible path and be at least 2.5 inch's in diameter(based on t28/t3 turbo).
From what you have posted it sounds like your "std muffler"is restricting flow causing exhaust gas to heat up in the turbine.
Larger diamiter exhaust will help for sure but again if muffler/s are not hiflow it doesnt matter how big your exhaust is you will have hi temp's.
Also dump pipe(pipe off the turbo housing) must/should be following the straightest possible path and be at least 2.5 inch's in diameter(based on t28/t3 turbo).
PATROL 2007 ST-L 4.8
3inch Lift, 35inch mtz, Rockhoppers
"POWER DEMANDS RESPECT"
3inch Lift, 35inch mtz, Rockhoppers
"POWER DEMANDS RESPECT"
Re: turbo exhaust heat
Have you had the fuel pump setup correctly by a proper Diesel place since fitting the turbo?
That would be my first stop having gone through all of this
That would be my first stop having gone through all of this
Surely those sorts of temperatures can only be created by combustion in the exhaust pipe?
If so, that's diesel burning in the exhaust because it wasn't burnt in the cylinder. Either too much fuel injected, or it's not burning properly.
More/cooler air might help, but as hienuf said, won't make much difference.
I'd think pump or injectors, or both.
Good luck,
Scott
If so, that's diesel burning in the exhaust because it wasn't burnt in the cylinder. Either too much fuel injected, or it's not burning properly.
More/cooler air might help, but as hienuf said, won't make much difference.
I'd think pump or injectors, or both.
Good luck,
Scott
when you do exaust go for a turbo flow muffler
basically less restrictive muffler
but dont go no mufflers probally will be to loude
was damb loude on a mates 2.4 td surf
imagine on yours
the reason i say this is in your first post you said you were considering a straight through no mufflers exaust
cheers
elliot
basically less restrictive muffler
but dont go no mufflers probally will be to loude
was damb loude on a mates 2.4 td surf
imagine on yours
the reason i say this is in your first post you said you were considering a straight through no mufflers exaust
cheers
elliot
I run a no muffler exhaust system on my 2.8D hilux and its not loud at all, and i could tell the difference in quicker spool up when i took the muffler off.
Last edited by whiteknight on Fri Feb 17, 2006 12:03 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: turbo exhaust heat
go straight to a 3" system with no muffler, will lower your EGT, also have you a EGR? if so block the damn thing offBIG ZETOR wrote:hello I recently fitted a geuine turbo to my 4.2 diesel patrol and the exaust gas temp keeps on rising above 500 degrees celcius when I'm towing a load and I have back off every time it gets close 550 D/C I'm still running 2 1/4 exaust system with a normal muffler. If I put a 2 1/2 system with mandrel bends and no muffler on my patrol will this help keep the temperature down or do I need an intercooler it has been tuned properly so fuel air mixture is spot on thanks.
Re: turbo exhaust heat
Will an EGR be doing anything when you've got boost? In a petrol they're only supposed to recirculate at part throttle - not at idle, not at full throttle. If it's not recirculating during boost it shouldn't affect EGT.4xgold0 wrote: have you a EGR? if so block the damn thing off
Scott
Re: turbo exhaust heat
im really not to sure Scott all i know is that when i blocked mine off, the EGT gauge reads about 80* cooler than before and thats just going to work and back,(highway about 50ks round trip)NJ SWB wrote:Will an EGR be doing anything when you've got boost? In a petrol they're only supposed to recirculate at part throttle - not at idle, not at full throttle. If it's not recirculating during boost it shouldn't affect EGT.4xgold0 wrote: have you a EGR? if so block the damn thing off
Scott
some people are alive simply because its illegal to kill them
Re: turbo exhaust heat
Sounds like it's worth doing, then.4xgold0 wrote:im really not to sure Scott all i know is that when i blocked mine off, the EGT gauge reads about 80* cooler than before and thats just going to work and back,(highway about 50ks round trip)NJ SWB wrote:Will an EGR be doing anything when you've got boost? In a petrol they're only supposed to recirculate at part throttle - not at idle, not at full throttle. If it's not recirculating during boost it shouldn't affect EGT.4xgold0 wrote: have you a EGR? if so block the damn thing off
Scott
I remember reading an artical about the factory turbo EGT running very high, one of the causes was due to the cast dump pipe running of the back of the turbo being very restrictive ( from memory 1 1/2 inch or 1 3/4) this didnt allow the exhaust gas to get away from the turbo quick enough., The fix was to remove it and fit a better breathing dump ( 2 1/2 inch + ) once this was done the fuel pump was then tuned to ensure the correct amount of fuel was being supplyed.
Regards
Daniels
Regards
Daniels
Exactly.....with turbo's one of the most important thing's is to expell the hot gases as fast as possible.DanielS wrote:I remember reading an artical about the factory turbo EGT running very high, one of the causes was due to the cast dump pipe running of the back of the turbo being very restrictive ( from memory 1 1/2 inch or 1 3/4) this didnt allow the exhaust gas to get away from the turbo quick enough., The fix was to remove it and fit a better breathing dump ( 2 1/2 inch + ) once this was done the fuel pump was then tuned to ensure the correct amount of fuel was being supplyed.
Regards
Daniels
PATROL 2007 ST-L 4.8
3inch Lift, 35inch mtz, Rockhoppers
"POWER DEMANDS RESPECT"
3inch Lift, 35inch mtz, Rockhoppers
"POWER DEMANDS RESPECT"
Sometimes the polished look is actually ceramic coating which helps keep the heat in the pipes not the engine bay.runnin4life wrote:yer i spose they go stainless cus ut can take the heat with out carpping itself i spose there is a speical alloy they use for it
cus u see the polished stainless dump pipes in the ricer mags well when i used to read them i did
cheers
elliot
R.I.P Brock Fontanini 28-3-06 - 16-2-08
www.teamcarnage.net
www.teamcarnage.net
I'd guess the average 2 litre mall-cruizin ricer with its polished dump pipes doesn't get that hot - certainly not as hot as a 4.2 litre Patrol or 'Cruiser pulling two and a half tonnes of boat/caravan/horse float up a long hill on a highway.runnin4life wrote:u see the polished stainless dump pipes in the ricer mags well when i used to read them i did
And a polished stainless pipe won't radiate heat as well as a dirty cast pipe.
I still reckon it's pumping too much fuel.
Scott
I would say start with the easy and most sensible things, if you have a standard exhaust replace this with a more free flowing one which will not restrict the turbo, try a 3/3.5" mandrel bent stainless dump amd depending one your money situation chose the rest of your exhaust from there. I think this will solve your problem but failing that move back along the line as to what standard component will be causing your engine to work overly hard.
Re: turbo exhaust heat
Petrol engines have a narrow range of fuel to air mixture ratio approx 1:14. As the throttle is opened allowing more air to enter the cylinders, the fuel is metered to keep the fuel air ratio reasonably constant. A petrol engine will run hot if the mixture is too lean.BIG ZETOR wrote:... it has been tuned properly so fuel air mixture is spot on...
Diesel is a completely different story. No tuner can claim that the fuel air mixture is spot on.
A diesel does not have a throttle. The amount of fuel is controlled by the govenor in the injection pump (or computer in modern engines) and the fuel to air ratio is not constant, but varies from extreemely lean at idle to so rich that there is not enough air to completely burn the fuel.
Incomplete combustion causes black smoke and elevated exhaust gas temperatures. A diesel engine likes to run lean.
Inject more fuel to produce more power, but this creates heat!
As others have stated, reduce the fueling to reduce the exhaust gas temps. This will reduce the fuel to air ratio.
Increasing the amount of air will help to reduce temperatures. Intercoolers, removing restriction in the inlet side and exhaust side will all help.
When climbing a grade with a load, the worst thing is to allow the engine to lug hard. It is better to change down a gear and get the engine revs up.
John
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