Coyfish, it does not matter who did the tune. It's what the tune is doing. If the tune is letting you reach 20-21 psi or higher and holding at that level on a K04 turbo with the stock DP and cats in place, then it's the tune, period. If so, that is a dangerous tune.
If you have the stock DP on with its own primary cat and have the secondary cat in place you should not be able to flow enough to max out the wastegate. Nor would you max out and induce creep with a simple test pipe in place. Rather, the ECU tuning is telling the turbo to permit boost levels above stock. Boosting at sustained levels above 18 psi at 5,500 rpm, or above 15-16 psi at 6,000 rpm will kill the turbo or worse, IMHO. And boost levels that high at that rpm on a K04 do not produce more power, just more damaging heat.
Please consider turning the boost down a couple psi in your AP mapping if you want to save the engine. When the center shaft of that little turbo (center shaft is only 5mm in diameter) gets heated to above 1500 degrees, which is likely to happen at your boost level at high rpm, the inconel hardening give out. The shaft then softens. When it softens it sags. When it sags, it produces metal to metal contact, including bearing failure. Some of that contact could also be the vanes on the "cold" compressor side hitting the surrounding housing. If that happens, you don't just lose the turbo. Pieces of those vanes break off, get sucked through the IC, the intake manifold and go into the engine through the intake valves. Result: zoom, zoom, boom.
I'm not saying that will happen. I am saying it can happen and I've seen this on other platforms when the shaft softens or the bearings fail, even on more hardy Garrett turbos pushed too hard for too long. Just a thought.
If you have the stock DP on with its own primary cat and have the secondary cat in place you should not be able to flow enough to max out the wastegate. Nor would you max out and induce creep with a simple test pipe in place. Rather, the ECU tuning is telling the turbo to permit boost levels above stock. Boosting at sustained levels above 18 psi at 5,500 rpm, or above 15-16 psi at 6,000 rpm will kill the turbo or worse, IMHO. And boost levels that high at that rpm on a K04 do not produce more power, just more damaging heat.
Please consider turning the boost down a couple psi in your AP mapping if you want to save the engine. When the center shaft of that little turbo (center shaft is only 5mm in diameter) gets heated to above 1500 degrees, which is likely to happen at your boost level at high rpm, the inconel hardening give out. The shaft then softens. When it softens it sags. When it sags, it produces metal to metal contact, including bearing failure. Some of that contact could also be the vanes on the "cold" compressor side hitting the surrounding housing. If that happens, you don't just lose the turbo. Pieces of those vanes break off, get sucked through the IC, the intake manifold and go into the engine through the intake valves. Result: zoom, zoom, boom.
I'm not saying that will happen. I am saying it can happen and I've seen this on other platforms when the shaft softens or the bearings fail, even on more hardy Garrett turbos pushed too hard for too long. Just a thought.
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