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Atta boy!
Positive displacement. I've got an Eaton M90 on one of my 96 V8 SHO's. I LOVE the stoplight to stoplight action.
Full boost at low RPM's. Frankly, I can't "spool up" a centrifugal blower before the car in front of me becomes part of my bumper, so I can rarely enjoy the potential of my Centrifugally charged cars.
I have a lot more fun in real traffic with the roots blower car.
Busy making another one right now, this time with the full 03/04 Cobra blower setup.
Hence an idea of mine. If I ran a smaller pulley like say 2.8 or 3.0. And using the BOV as a pop-off valve, like I am now, set at 9-10psi. The boost would start alot sooner and act more like a PD blower ( not as quick though). Would this work?? I already see 3-4 psi almost anytime I floor it. (sans 5th) It would be awesome to have 7-8 psi before 4k rpm. And then just hold 10psi to redline. Damn pistons!!!I mean if I'm limited to 10 psi, mine as well try to get it as fast a possible.
Jessey needs to dyno his 91 and that will be another 400 whp-ft/lb vortech...
The bearing wear on the top main bearing from running a tight belt is FAR worse than what the bottom half will see. When I took my motor apart at 90k miles, the top front bearing show much more wear than all the others combined, and it only had a supercharger for 8k miles.
Heat can be a problem, but it can be solved. I really don't understand your fear of interupting exhaust for a turbo. You can get away with running a smaller injector when making the same power and you don't have rev the crap out of it to get some go.
The only real argument for an SC is saving the transmission. If I were to do it again (it wouldn't be a SHO), I would turbo.
There are some over simplified explanations taking place here. Both systems generate compression heat in the intake charge air. Turbo systems add heat transfer through the body of the turbo, and also heat soak the exhaust manifold, producing radiant heat. This is why it is so rare to see an effective turbo system without intercooling. SC produces more consistent power, for mild applications, but for higher peak hp applications, a street supercharger must be turned at a very high rpm. This increases torque loads in the lower revs tremendously, and can lead to premature component failure. Turbos on the other hand, usually spool more gradually, as exhaust speed increases. They are slightly more likely to cause pre-detonation, if not intercooled properly, or if you use a poor quality, or sticky wastegate. To compensate for this, most people tune turbos rich in the higher revs, to cool the charge (strange but true/rich is cool). This means bad milage while boosting, but a somewhat large turbo that does not spool in the low revs, can run an essentially stock fuel curve, till the onset of boost, returning great mileage under low loads. Turbos use engine oil for lubricant and cooling, breaking it down more quickly. Superchargers put loads on the snout of the crank, that the engineers did not anticipate, and by lifting the snout, cause premature wear of the front upper main bearing, depending on boost and belt tension. Mechanically spinning the supercharger, consumes a small percent of the extra hp produced, increaling load, and reducing mileage. Turbos use the otherwise wasted energy of the expanding exhaust to produce their boost. Small turbo=throttle response, big turbo=peak power.