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![]() 665 Posts Member #: 9345 Post Whore Sheffield |
2nd Feb, 2011 at 01:19:59pm
Hi all.
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![]() 514 Posts Member #: 2104 Post Whore Essex - UK |
2nd Feb, 2011 at 01:41:54pm
mine goes from heater take off to the turbo, then out of turbo in to heater matrix in the car, then back out of there in to the normal heater plumbing on the lower radiator hose. "Tuning should be a compromise between what is possible and what is necessary"
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![]() 5417 Posts Member #: 6181 Double hard bastard brookwood woking |
2nd Feb, 2011 at 01:45:04pm
I have started posting on Instagram also my name on there is turbomk1golf
On 1st Nov, 2007 Ben H said:
There is no such thing as 'insignificant weight saving', it all adds up. |
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![]() 665 Posts Member #: 9345 Post Whore Sheffield |
2nd Feb, 2011 at 02:08:02pm
Yes there is a set way...
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3006 Posts Member #: 2500 Post Whore Buckinghamshire |
2nd Feb, 2011 at 03:49:56pm
I set mine up like minij, but after taking advice and reading the PDF above, it is going to be changed !.
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5988 Posts Member #: 2024 Formally Retired Rural Suffolk |
2nd Feb, 2011 at 04:03:30pm
On 2nd Feb, 2011 tadge44 said:
I diont think it matters a scrap which direction you flow the water through the turbo as long as it is maintained. Any other views, please ?. I disagree I'm afraid...... the flow of water is far more important when the engine is shut down than running - a pump can overcome anything if it's big enough, but does nothing when you stop the engine. So you need a thermo-syphon when the engine has stopped. That means flow is upwards through the turbo and downwards through whatever is taking the heat away. Schrödinger's cat - so which one am I ??? |
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3006 Posts Member #: 2500 Post Whore Buckinghamshire |
2nd Feb, 2011 at 05:43:01pm
I have expressed myself badly and misled you.
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5988 Posts Member #: 2024 Formally Retired Rural Suffolk |
2nd Feb, 2011 at 05:58:32pm
Apologies David,
Edited by Rod S on 2nd Feb, 2011. Schrödinger's cat - so which one am I ??? |
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![]() 5417 Posts Member #: 6181 Double hard bastard brookwood woking |
2nd Feb, 2011 at 07:31:56pm
On 2nd Feb, 2011 jamie@thefatgarage said:
Yes there is a set way... http://www.turbobygarrett.com/turbobygarre...ptimization.pdf In at the bottom, out at the top. It means less heat soak when the engine is off. Explained in the PDF above. Happy days, as i have done my lines at the weekend and they are out at the top and in at the bottom. I have started posting on Instagram also my name on there is turbomk1golf
On 1st Nov, 2007 Ben H said:
There is no such thing as 'insignificant weight saving', it all adds up. |
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![]() 2742 Posts Member #: 637 Post Whore Hertfordshire |
2nd Feb, 2011 at 08:08:52pm
should you put the water in to the rad through the bottom aswell then? My build thread..
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![]() 665 Posts Member #: 9345 Post Whore Sheffield |
2nd Feb, 2011 at 08:15:19pm
Hot water always goes in the top on rads... without exception I think... I'm sure someone will correct that if it wrong :)
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![]() 863 Posts Member #: 951 Post Whore Bromsgrove |
2nd Feb, 2011 at 09:02:15pm
Reading this I believe I have mine plumbed the wrong way round too,and may have led you to doing the same,David,sorry.......I have an electric cooling fan with a timer,meaning it stays on for 10 minutes after shutdown and certainly increases the thermosyphon effect as the water in the radiator is cooled. 'Where does the engine go?' |
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3006 Posts Member #: 2500 Post Whore Buckinghamshire |
2nd Feb, 2011 at 09:08:18pm
My original system was done out of a need to get something in there and I always had some misgivings. I remember you pointing out,Steve, that it would be disastrous if the heater valve had been turned off, which I had thought myself,
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3006 Posts Member #: 2500 Post Whore Buckinghamshire |
3rd Feb, 2011 at 01:47:43pm
Just been out and re-made the turbo water plumbing.There is a convenient drain plug at the back of the block,tapped half inch UNF.The Saab banjo bolt that I am using is 14mmx1.5 so it was 2 minutes work to drill out and re-tap to suit. The pipe to the back of the turbo is then only about 8 inches long and took 10 minutes to solder up.
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![]() 5417 Posts Member #: 6181 Double hard bastard brookwood woking |
3rd Feb, 2011 at 08:34:19pm
Hi mate, i was thinking of doing that as its nice and close to the turbo, but is there much flow from that drain plug?
I have started posting on Instagram also my name on there is turbomk1golf
On 1st Nov, 2007 Ben H said:
There is no such thing as 'insignificant weight saving', it all adds up. |
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3006 Posts Member #: 2500 Post Whore Buckinghamshire |
3rd Feb, 2011 at 09:15:02pm
I,m guessing the flow will be as good as anywhere and am advised its a higher pressure area (dont understand that, but so what )
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![]() 665 Posts Member #: 9345 Post Whore Sheffield |
3rd Feb, 2011 at 09:20:43pm
I think pressure is constant in the whole cooling system, so that sounds a bit like pub talk to me. It's like saying tyre pressure is greater nearer the valve! |
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![]() 12307 Posts Member #: 565 Carlos Fandango Burnham-on-Crouch, Essex |
3rd Feb, 2011 at 09:24:43pm
well, pressure must be different either side of the pump othewise the water would stay still. On 28th Aug, 2011 Kean said:
At the risk of being sigged... Joe, do you have a photo of your tool? http://www.turbominis.co.uk/forums/index.p...9064&lastpost=1 https://joe1977.imgbb.com/ |
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![]() 665 Posts Member #: 9345 Post Whore Sheffield |
3rd Feb, 2011 at 09:32:26pm
Yes, I grant you that immediately either side of the pump there may be a very small pressure difference. But as near as f##k is to swearing, everywhere else it will be the same.. water doesn't compress well.. as you will find if your cylinder ever gets filled with it.
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![]() 12307 Posts Member #: 565 Carlos Fandango Burnham-on-Crouch, Essex |
3rd Feb, 2011 at 09:39:05pm
well theres enough pressure to jet water about 10ft through a pin hole in the heater valve at idle.
On 28th Aug, 2011 Kean said:
At the risk of being sigged... Joe, do you have a photo of your tool? http://www.turbominis.co.uk/forums/index.p...9064&lastpost=1 https://joe1977.imgbb.com/ |
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![]() 665 Posts Member #: 9345 Post Whore Sheffield |
3rd Feb, 2011 at 09:42:56pm
It's not a question of what Vizard said or what he meant on that occasion, only he can answer that. It's a question of physics. Anyway, I'll leave it there as I know I'm right, and you know how far stuff shoots at the idle from an unknown hole size and what Vizard said once. I have beer that needs drinking! |
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![]() 2909 Posts Member #: 83 Post Whore Glasgow, Scotland |
3rd Feb, 2011 at 10:13:21pm
On 3rd Feb, 2011 jamie@thefatgarage said:
In fact due to it's lack of compressibility I'm really not sure there will be a difference either side of the pump, it's a mechanical moving of liquid, not like an air compressor. it may not be a case of the liquid is compressed and "storing" the engergy, merely that there is a force behind the liquid, the centripetal?? force of the liquid exiting the tip of the water pump, therefore if a pressure tap was placed at the inlet and outlet of the pump, there would be a difference, as its not the liquid providing the force, but a combination of the pump, and the restrictions upstream of the pump. the compressibility of the liquid is irrelevant. turbo 16v k-series 11.9@118.9 :)
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![]() 665 Posts Member #: 9345 Post Whore Sheffield |
3rd Feb, 2011 at 10:45:32pm
The compressibility of the liquid is entirely relevant if a pressure difference is observed. In your scenario what creates the higher pressure, or as I like to call it more stuff in a smaller place? Does the water pump make liquid somehow? Or has the water now decided to become temporarily compressible? It's one or the other...
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![]() 2909 Posts Member #: 83 Post Whore Glasgow, Scotland |
3rd Feb, 2011 at 10:57:20pm
so in a brake system when you have your foot lightly on the brake and heavily on the brake there is the same volume of uncompressible fluid, are you telling me that the force on the brake piston remains the same? ofcourse not, its the force exterted on the fluid by somehting else that creates the pressure in the fluid, not the compressibility of the fluid. ergo the compressibility is irrelevant :)
turbo 16v k-series 11.9@118.9 :)
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5988 Posts Member #: 2024 Formally Retired Rural Suffolk |
3rd Feb, 2011 at 11:51:06pm
On 3rd Feb, 2011 jamie@thefatgarage said:
I think pressure is constant in the whole cooling system, so that sounds a bit like pub talk to me. It's like saying tyre pressure is greater nearer the valve! Where is the pump inside your tyre ??? If you think pressure is constant in a pumped system then you really do need to go down to the pub
Pumps create a pressure rise to move fluid. There are other ways to move fluid, density changes for example (ie, the thermosyphon) but to suggest a pump moves fluid without a pressure rise is absurd. An engine coolant system is pressurised to a nominal static pressure by the initial heat input to say 1 bar but once pressurised, the individual pressures at any point in the system, above or below 1 bar, are determined by the pump and the resistance to flow within the system. Schrödinger's cat - so which one am I ??? |
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