mods are injen CAI. HKS bpv. turboXS tbe. trz mm. rpmc turbo inlet. denso iridium plugs. and probably about to buy standback an a front mount. goals, none really. but i guess at MOST 300hp? mainly just wanted minor bolt ons and tune so it could be something that will move and be reliable. i dont track the car or race it. so its not something i go out an beat the piss out of. why do you ask?
I was just wonder where you were in the mod process. Pretty close to where I am, maybe a bit more. I've not seen the need for an aftermarket BPV or an turbo inlet or even a rear motor mount, but put down some pretty respectable numbers with the CAI and catless DP/RP into stock CBE. - 5.1 seconds to 60, 0-100 is 11.5 plus or minus a tenth, and quarter at 13.4 all of stock ECU and stock wheels and tires.
I took care of the loudness and drone by welding a straight through reso in the middle of the RP. Worked great and no power loss.
I don't see a need for a turbo upgrade either at this point. But if I went that way it would be mild -- I don't want to lose low end torque/response and don't want any increased boost lag. The guys that want to go big turbo need to think hard about the fact that there's probably a 350 whp limit on reliability of our internals and on the rest of the drive train.
With you mods you are probably putting down about 270 whp or so which would be maybe 15% more at the crank, or about 300-310 at the crank. This is up about 45-50 horses over stock, wouldn't you think? That's pretty respectable and pretty close to your goal.
I disagree with those who say that running catless DP/RP's will shorten the life of the seals on our journal bearing K04. Will it maybe cause a bit of smoke if you sit a long time at idle? Maybe, sometimes. I sometimes see a little smoke on "take off" after sitting at idle in slow traffic, but it is infrequent and no more than with several other modded high boost catless DP/RP cars I've owned over the years, including some that had ball bearing shafts in the turbo. Most of my problems were solved with a catch can. There are other things that can be done to relieve oil pressure on the seals in the turbo without decreasing vital oil flow to the bearings, but that's beyond this thread.
I haven't seen the need for a tune and prefer to run rich and stay at stock boost, just as a safety measure. I'm not convinced there's a lot to be gained by leaning our our engines anyway, which is where we get most of the power gain from a tune.
I'm happy where I am. I might consider, way on down the road, a reworked K04. I did have a Garrett T-04 reworked on a SAAB I owned -- same sort of work as PG offers, and did see an improvement in performance at the high end of the power band without losing anything down low. I thought it was a good compromise and still do. The car had 75,000 miles on it and the turbo was starting to make some bearing noise (not smoking), so it was time to either rebuild it or replace it. The rebuild with the bigger compressor wheel and clipped turbine wheel, etc, was worth the work and was relatively inexpensive at the time (way cheaper than a new turbo) so I'm not ruling that out.
I'm just not sure about the plan to put modified Garrett internals in a modified K04 housing. We know what the PG upgrade can do. I'd want to wait and see some real world experience with this new proposed product. That's just the caution in me.