T41pilot wrote: If the A&P decides he doesn't want to look at the turbo, is it rocket science to take it apart and have a look myself?
Regards
It's not rocket science to separate the 3 main parts of the turbo (intake housing, exhaust housing, core), but it can be tricky (and potentially dangerous.) The only difficult part is removing the big hefty snap ring on the intake side. I had to modify the tips on my (strong) snap ring pliers have enough access to get it out, but if that thing snaps free it could be nasty. Wear eye protection.
There won't be much to see though and probably wouldn't help your troubleshooting. The compressor/turbine blades are part of the core, all you would be removing is the intake/exhaust housings. This is what the core looks like with the housings removed:
https://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/2-AAAOSw ... -l1600.jpgI actually (destructively) disassembled an old core out of curiosity (took it completely apart.) Don't do that unless you're going to throw it in the trashcan afterwards, it would likely void any sort of warranty repair and throw off the factory balancing. But I will mention that the nut on the compressor side of the shaft is left-hand threaded (found that out the hard way.) I would doubt that an A&P would mess with turbo core internals, seems like more of a factory thing to me.
The more I think about it the more Larry's thoughts make sense. Definitely investigate the oil pump (and pump to crankcase oil path), if I recall the pump is disassembled/reassembled during the engine build, with potential opportunity to get things wrong. Check your Turbo return oil lines to be sure they are free of blockage (you know oil is getting to the turbo because the sump was leaking). In particular, be sure the pump-to-crankcase return oil is truly able to drain freely into the crankcase and isn't actually ending up in some kind of void with no escape.