Forge BPV analysis
I have had an interesting evening. I decided to try to understand the springs/shims in the Forge BPV, but I must say I know a lot more details, but I am not sure it is going to help much.
I set up my hand vacuum pump and vacuum gauge so I could suck on the valve manifold nipple and observe the piston moving. I checked out the stock valve first, and then tried every combination of yellow spring, 0, 1, & 2 shims, blue spring, 0, 1, & 2 shims, and just for giggles, the red spring with 0 and 1 shims. I repeated each of the measurements on the yellow and blue springs four times, going through each combination to check for consistency. Man that was a lot of opening and closing the cover and shuffling springs around.
First an observation of the construction of the stock VS. the Forge BPV. I did not disassemble the stock valve, but I am almost certain it is simply a diaphram with the manifold vacuum on one side, the boosted air on the other, and a preloaded spring holding it closed. The valve seems to open quite linearly with the pressure differential. Also, it doesn't open very far.
The Forge design is much cleverer. When the valve is closed, the manifold vacuum acts on the top of the piston, about 1.5" in diameter. The boosted air acts on the closed piston which is about .75" in diameter. This means that the vacuum has four times the effect on the piston than the boost pressure. Now, when the valve begins to open, the boost pressure is allowed inside the valve and now acts on the full 1.5" in diameter. The effect of this is when the pressure differential reaches the point where the valve starts to open, it opens quickly because of the assist from the boost pressure. It starts to open later though, because the boost pressure is not exerting as much pressure against the preload of the spring.
Is this making sense?
Anyway, here are the numbers:
The stock valve starts to open at 7.8 psi, and is fully open (which isn't very open) at 13.8 psi.
The Forge valve starts to open, and is fully open like this:
Yellow, 0 shims - start 4.6, full 7.0
Yellow, 1 shim - start 5.0, full 7.6
Yellow, 2 shims - start 5.5, full 8.4
Blue, 0 shims - start 4.3, full 7.5
Blue, 1 shim - start 5.3, full 7.9
Blue, 2 shims - start 6.1, full 9.1
Red, 0 shims - start 7.5, full 13.3
Red, 1 shim - start 8.5, full 13.8
Observations:
1) The yellow with no shims opens at a higher pressure then the blue with no shims, but this is because at least in my set, the yellow spring is longer than the blue one, so starts with higher preload for the same height. This points out that the resting length of the spring has a significant effect on the opening point and there may be manufacturing tolerences here so yours may be different than mine.
2) The stock valve in free air starts to open at 7.8 psi, where for the Forge to start to open at that point, you would have to run the red spring, which has been shown to be much too strong. This blows my idea out of the water - you cannot adjust the spring preload by comparing the simple opening vacuum on the intake manifold the same as the stock valve. The construction of the valves is so different, this just doesn't work.
My conclusion is that to adjust the valve properly, you need to put a boost gauge on the boost tube just before the throttle butterfly. You want to adjust the valve preload so it opens just as you close the throttle from WOT with only a small boost spike as that happens. In my opinion you want as light a spring as possible to keep the valve open as long as you can until you get into the thottle again so the turbo keeps free-wheeling.
I am now even more convinced the the ideal BPV is electrically operated, bang open and bang closed, based on electronic reading of the throttle plate position and boost pressure.
Sorry for the pedantic long-windedness, but I got into it and couldn't stop...
I'm out to the garage to put my car back together - I'm gonna try yellow spring and one shim for tomorrow's test drive (um commute).