n307tw wrote:1. Is there any downside to having a completely separate oil system for just the turbo with a second oil cooler?
In addition to the weight and complexity comments by others, I want to add something you may not be thinking about: Heat Capacity. A small volume of oil on its own circuit is going to be able to absorb less heat than a large volume of oil, and a shorter oil circuit is going to circulate the same oil back through the "hot section" more often. So unless you add a large oil cooler and/or a large oil sump on your separate turbo oil system, it will likely cool the turbo
less-effectively than the current system.
From what we know (and I say this as a builder who's studied the Turbo a lot but only run my own unit on the ground so far), the Turbo cools just fine in the air. Its the on-ground/post-shutdown heat-soak that's the problem. So you're adding weight, complexity, and failure modes to all aspects of the system in order to fix an issue that only crops up a small amount of the time. Furthermore, the oil system of the turbo is primarily there for lubrication, not heat-rejection. Oil only flows through a very small area of the turbo and only in a limited quantity.
The water-cooling passages, however, are larger and designed for cooling. A small separate water cooling system with an electric pump would be roughly the same weight and complexity as a separate oil system, and likely do a better job at actually reducing the oil coking problem.
Finally, to return to thinking about failure modes: we know that a running Turbo seems to continue running just fine without water; therefore a failure of a separate water-cooling circuit would be far less catastrophic than the failure of an oil circuit.
Extracting more than 80 hp from a VW is risky and fool hardy at best.
Gordon - While I agree with you that the Turbo has been a "problem child" and was not ready for prime-time when it was released, its important not to let hyperbole take over. VWs have successfully run over 80hp in many arenas, and I'm not aware of exhaust valves being a major/common failure point on the Turbos. If folks have borescope images showing green exhaust valves on their Aerovees (along with evidence that they were not running excessive CHTs and a lean mixture), I'd love to see it. But we haven't seen that chatter on the Forums here. The Turbo issues have revolved around the oil coking far more than anything else.
Take care,
--Noel