Keith@FM said:the vented one is noisier and easier to plumb in.
Keith
A wastegate can still take away performance. However, neither type of BoV (recirc or vent) makes much of a difference for our turbos (as Keith stated). There are always trade-offs with turbos. If you dont blow off, you can lose some turbine rotation, and damage the turbine after extended use (the forced air has nowhere to go but back in). On the other side, while you are allowing the turbine to spin more freely (and save the blades) by venting, you are losing any accumulated psi. The engine is a closed circuit, and if you dont blow (during a shift, say), some of that pressure can stay in the circuit. With a quick-spooling turbine and no waste, you can actually REDUCE lag.mp3_moran said:keep the recirculating valve.......if you want a nice sound go with an external wastegate and vent that into the atmosphere. You can here the turbo spool from a block away and it doesn't take away from the performance of the car like the vented bov does
I know you already made your choice, think of this info as to benefit future readers
tooooooooooooootally agree, keith. just giving both theoretical arguments. In real life, ALWAYS BoV or waste...........Keith@FM said:Our opinion is that a BOV of some sort is required for a good turbo install. The compressor stall is a bigger problem than any loss of "accumulated psi". We recirculate on some of our kits and vent to atmosphere on others, depending on the engine management system used.
Keith
In real life, ALWAYS BoV or waste
Ahhhh, smart aftermarket manufacturers, always a pleasure....let us know when you get towards a more "final" dyno for the p5 (w/exhaust, timing, etc)Keith@FM said:
Sorry, I missed this the first time. Wastegates and BOVs are different things, designed to address different problems.
A wastegate controls the amount of boost a turbo generates by bleeding off excess exhaust gas once the set limit is reached. All turbos have wastegates. Some are integral and part of the exhaust housing, some are external and plumbed into the manifold. External ones can be vented to atmosphere or into the exhaust. Internal ones go back into the
A BOV vents excess pressure when the throttle plate is slammed shut, bouncing a wave of pressure back into the turbo and stalling the compressor. A typical scenario is a shift. BOVs are not included in all turbo installations, but they really do make a difference. They can be vented to atmosphere or to the intake, as I mentioned earlier.
Some BOV designs do leak, and therefore can cause problems at idle if they are vented to atmosphere (ie, sucking in unmetered air) and there is an air meter of some sort in the system. It's a matter of design of the BOV.
Keith