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Turbocharging
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Mike G wrote: What about supercharging? I've seen a kit for around £2000 (maybe more with shipping). Pretty much bolt it on your engine and get it on a dyno (as far as I know). A bit more expensive, but more linear power and you don't have to worry about stressing engine components like you might with a turbo. A lot more expensive than an engine change, but almost doubles the power apparently. I've had no experience with this, just what I've read, so someone out there may know much more about it than I do.
A supercharger will stress the engine exactly the same as a turbocharger. A turbo is in fact just an exhaust gas driven supercharger. So you'd need the same amount of control when tuning for either setup.
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Scimike wrote: I am no expert on this, but I believe (happy to be told different) that it's more involved than just bolting on a turbo if you want it to still drive and or work.
As a min I would expect a need to lower compression, alter ignition timing and fuel map so you somehow need to gain control of the ECU. Better breathing so exhaust and inlet improvement. That's assuming the cam profile is suitable and the engine is generally upto the BHP increase.
All this = £££££££££££ and lots of time to develop.
So it's generally cheaper to just fit a better engine or bigger engine with all this sorted for you.
Tuning is an expensive can of worms that will more often reduce BHP or just move the curve rather than improve over the complete rev range which is ideal. You only know what you have achieve on a rolling road, so that costs also.
No cheap answers at the moment.
I think the answer depends. As in what you are trying to achieve.
Certainly you will need a way to control the fuelling and ideally the ignition. But there are ways of doing this and I think the ECU is remappable anyway.
But you don't as a rule need lower compression to fit a turbo. If you are building for ultimate boost and power figures you would want to do this. But a low pressure setup should work fine. Although there will be a bit of trial and error on how much boost it will handle and how strong the internals are.
You also shouldn't need to touch the exhaust or intake really. Apart from the fitting of the turbo.
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G13BB versus GTI crank
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It would be good to hear a step by step report how to turbo a jimny I've enjoyed reading about Dave's build
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