wlarson861 wrote:This is the rebuild kit I put in: https://www.ebay.com/itm/Turbo-Rebuild- ... lg&vxp=mtr
it is a Garrett gt2554.
Many customers question the necessity or benefits of plumbing in those extra water
lines to the sides of the turbo’s center housing. Why not just leave them off? The reality is that
a water-cooled turbo can be damaged irreparably without proper water line setup.
NWade wrote:Thanks for the temp readings, gentlemen! Lots of possible variability in exact readings, but the trend is certainly clear and reinforces our suspicions about what constitutes "public enemy #1" for these turbos (i.e. post-shutdown heat-soak).
Vehicles with extremely low exhaust gas temperatures and no water
cooling system (low-output diesels or purpose-built methanol / alcohol fueled dragsters, for
example) may not require a water-cooling system for the turbocharger. In this case the condition
of all turbo components should be closely monitored ...
I believe in the Aerovee Turbo webinar Jeremy Monnett said the turbo was from a diesel truck. I'm not aware of any trucks that make anywhere around 100hp, so that didn't give me a very good feeling for how well matched the turbo is to the application. Can anyone of you guys that have the turbo find a model number?[/quote]
tljones42 wrote:I believe in the Aerovee Turbo webinar Jeremy Monnett said the turbo was from a diesel truck. I'm not aware of any trucks that make anywhere around 100hp, so that didn't give me a very good feeling for how well matched the turbo is to the application. Can anyone of you guys that have the turbo find a model number?
At some point I heard Jeremy say this turbo was from an Izuzu (sp?) truck application.
Tom Jones
pfhoeycfi wrote:Has anyone been able to plot an operating point on the 2554 map for 100hp?
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