TTE550’s Installed

Today the second TTE550 was hooked up and the engine put back into the car.

engine_in_tte550I’m finding a suggestion to install the axles while the engine is a couple of inches above the mounts, and the transmission brackets a few inches above the tranny mounts, to be a good one.  Turning the wheel fully left or right depending upon the side being worked, allows the axle to go in, and with the engine hanging from the hoist there’s enough freeplay to push it slightly if needed.  This sped up the process of reinstalling the engine substantially.

One TTE550 Installed (Almost)

Today I began installing the TTE550 turbochargers onto the engine.  Step number one was to check the wastegate preload to confirm the 0.55 bar that I was told they were set to prior to delivery.  The setup shown below is what I use for checking the preload.

Picture of Wastegate preload check setup
Wastegate preload check

The yellow hose runs from an air compressor tank, through a pressure regulator (that I purchased for performing leak down checks on the engine cylinders), and then via an AN Y to a pair of hoses that connect to the wastegate canisters.  As the regulator is slowly opened I monitor for movement from the wastegate arms, and when movement is seen I’ll check the pressure.  This is repeated a few times to get confidence that each wastegate is beginning to open at the same pressure.

As it turned out the preload was set to only 5 psi.  With intentions of running around 24-25 psi out to 7000 rpm I was not confident that would be enough preload on the wastegates.  I increased the preload on both wastegates to 8 psi.

An issue I expected to encounter was with the wastegate canister interfering with the turbo inlet pipe.

Picture of Inlet and wastegate interference
Inlet and wastegate interference

TTE adds a pair of rings around the wastegate canister that is concave in between the fasteners.  At the mid-point between the bolts the ring is about flush with the lip around the wastegate canister so that it isn’t any wider than the wastegate canister by itelf.  But where the bolts are located it is taller, and as luck would have it that was where the inlet pipe came closest to the wastegate canister.

I loosened the bolts and rotated the rings slightly and gained some clearance, but there was still some contact between the two parts.  As I’ve had to do in the past, I took a set of pliers and bent the wastegate bracket down slightly to gain some additional clearance.  This produced enough of a gap that I felt good about the setup.

Clearance gained
Clearance gained

Of course by slightly altering the location of the canister I became concerned that I might have also affected the amount of preload on the wastegate, thereby possibly causing the wastegates to open at slightly different pressures.  So I hooked the wastegates back up to the preload checker and confirmed that the tweaking had not altered the preload in any meaningful way.

I use a silicone coupler to attach the turbo inlet pipe to the turbocharger compressor intake.  Something I wanted to make sure not to do was disturb the airflow going into the compressor by creating a gap between the edge of the coupler and the outer lip of the compressor inlet.

TTE goes to some effort to port the inlet from what a standard BorgWarner RS4 K04 looks like, as shown by the comparison photographs below:

Turbocharger compressor inlet lip comparison
Inlet lip comparison
Inlet lip comparison - close up
Inlet lip comparison – close up

And the TTE lip is measurably thinner than that of the standard K04.

BorgWarner RS4 K04 Inlet Lip Thickness
BorgWarner RS4 K04 Inlet Lip Thickness
TTE 550 Inlet Lip Thickness
TTE 550 Inlet Lip Thickness

To ensure that I was not creating more turbulence than will occur anyhow I was careful about where I placed the clamp that holds the silicone coupler to the compressor inlet.

Silicone coupler attached to compressor inlet
Silicone coupler attached to compressor inlet

The intent being to minimize the gap between the silicone and inlet.

Another lesson from the last turbocharger swap is not to trust the crush washers.  With the FT21’s I ended up with a washer on the oil supply side to the turbocharger dripping oil, leading to an unplanned engine pull to fix the drip.

To address that possibility I am attaching a gasket forming material to each side of the crush washers that are used on the oil supply, coolant supply, and coolant return banjo bolts.

Sealant
Sealant

My hope is that this extra step will all but eliminate the chance of a leak from these lines.

FT21 Removal Underway

I made some good progress toward moving on from the FrankenTurbo F21’s to the TTE 550’s.  Engine was removed along with the driver side FT21.  I’m hoping to have the second FT21 removed today so it can be shipped back to FrankenTurbo for some porting of the turbine housing.  (We’re interested in seeing if there is an affect on exhaust side back pressure with porting of the turbine housing).  These will come back for additional flowbench testing in addition to another run on the S4.

FrankenTurbo F21 removed from engine
One FT21 removed

 

In order to recycle my coolant I collect it in the rectangular box (1), transfer it to the plastic jug (2), and then run it through a coffee filter back into a coolant container (3).  Because the filtering process takes a while I have two going at the same time and refill the funnel when I have a break doing other tasks on the car.

Engine coolant reuse

Both turbo’s are out, and now boxed up for shipping back to FrankenTurbo.

Picture of FrankenTurbo F21 Mixed Flow Turbochargers
FrankenTurbo F21 Mixed Flow Turbochargers