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- MSP 1145
i heard that its just the aluminum intake piping amplifying the sound of the turbo..
thats why u didnt have it before with no intake
x2 it makes sense.
i heard that its just the aluminum intake piping amplifying the sound of the turbo..
thats why u didnt have it before with no intake
sounds like more BS than its worth to me... 2 BOVs just doesn't seem necessary to me on such low boost.
Dub, when you remove the filter the gobble will be gone, for the same reason it was gone with no CAI at all. But you don't wanna be running without a filter for too long.
Stock BPVs are a dime a dozen around here. SOmeone around you prolly still has one they're not using. Run it between the CAI and cold pipe and I'll bet you the gobble is gone.
Dub said tomorrow he was gonna remove the filter to see if that changed anything... and yes it will. But that would prove it isn't the pipe amplifying turbo noise... but I already know its not that.
I had the turkey with my WeaponR intake. I cut off the nipple connecting it to my stock BPV and removed the BPV. I welded a 1" diameter nipple onto the SRI and cold pipe and used 1" hose to connect them to my new Boost Sciences RDV which replaced the stock BPV. Suddenly, the turkey was gone, even though the long aluminum SRI pipe was still there..
what reason does the "no cai" have in common with "no filter"? and now its the filter? before it was alloy pipe. I'm confused.
my bet is that the added restriction on the intake of the filter is changing the dynamics of the air in the entire system, and having that restriction is creating a partial vacuum on the intake side of the compressor, which fluctuates when the BOV suddenly releases pressure upon the TB closing. that partial vacuum is causing the pressure wave to be out of balance where it was in balance before.
and you get: compressor surge.
I think you're very close Wagon, but I think its even simpler than that. If all the pressure can escape through the relief valve then theres no pressure left to create compressor surge. And the little that does remain is distributed into the intake pipe. With no filter that pipe in effect becomes endlessly long and gives all the leftover gas an easy place to go. Add a filter, especially with a very short pipe, and there isn't room to contain much extra pressure so it backs up into the turbo (compressor surge).
and this 1" pipe is a large enough volume to properly release enough air to alleviate the pressure wave that would have otherwise caused surge. wonderful, so we agree then. lol
he's not recirculating... so nothing goes to the intake pipe.
HeeHee... ooops... you're right. So lighter spring. Or add a BPV... or remove the turbo.... JUST KIDDING!