Component Connection: The Mod Squad – Boosting Engine Power With Turbochargers And Superchargers – UnderhoodService

Component Connection: The Mod Squad – Boosting Engine Power With Turbochargers And Superchargers

The power that a naturally aspirated engine can make is limited by its displacement and how efficiently you can make it breathe with cylinder head, camshaft and induction system modifications. The engine can only inhale so much air because the atmospheric force that's pushing air into the engine is only 14.7 lbs. per square inch at sea level. To make matters worse, atmospheric pressure decreases with elevation. Air density also decreases with temperature because hot air is thinner than cold air.

The power that a naturally aspirated ­engine can make is limited by its ­displacement and how efficiently you can make it breathe with cylinder head, camshaft and induction system modifications.

The engine can only inhale so much air because the atmospheric force that’s pushing air into the engine is only 14.7 lbs. per square inch at sea level. To make matters worse, atmospheric pressure decreases with elevation. Air density also decreases with temperature because hot air is thinner than cold air.

Most stock naturally aspirated engines only achieve a peak volumetric efficiency ­of 75% to 85%.

Multiple valves per cylinder and variable valve timing help improve breathing ­efficiency in late-model engines, but if you’re working a small block or big block Chevy, Ford or Chrysler engine, you’re ­usually ­limited to two valves per cylinder and fixed valve timing.

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Other Tricks To Improve Airflow And Volumetric Efficiency In A Naturally Aspirated Engine

• Installing a higher lift, longer duration camshaft.

• Modifying the stock heads or replacing them with aftermarket performance heads that have larger valves and better ports.

• Installing an intake manifold with taller and longer runners to help ram more air into the cylinders.

• Installing a larger throttle body or carburetor (or multiple carburetors) that can flow more CFM (cubic feet per minute).

• Adding an air scoop or cold air intake ­system to help route cooler denser air into the engine.

• Improving exhaust scavenging with headers and crossover pipes that help improve air flow out of the cylinders.

With such improvements, it is possible to boost an engine’s volumetric efficiency into the 90% range or even higher. But achieving 100% or higher volumetric efficiency (especially at higher rpms) usually requires some type of forced ­induction system such as a turbocharger or ­supercharger.

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Forced Induction

A forced induction system overcomes the limitations of atmospheric pressure by pushing more air into the cylinders. Consequently, the engine’s power output becomes a function of how much boost it gets. What’s more, dialing up the boost pressure overcomes a lot of deficiencies in the induction system and cylinder heads that would otherwise limit air flow and the engine’s volumetric efficiency. After all, it is much easier to push air into an engine with a turbo or blower than to suck it in with intake vacuum alone.

Even with a relatively moderate amount of boost, say 6 to 8 psi, a forced induction system can easily increase the power output of a typical street engine 150 or more horsepower.

Turn up the boost pressure to 14 to 16 psi and you can usually double the power output of most engines. Crank it up even more and you’re off to the races. The challenge then becomes building the engine so it can safely handle the extra power without breaking something (which we will get to shortly).

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Talking Turbos

Turbochargers are a way of making small displacement engines produce power equivalent to a larger displacement engine. Turbos are also used with most passenger car and light truck diesel engines to boost horsepower and torque across the engine’s rpm range. The amount of boost pressure delivered by the turbo determines the power increase.

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Air Induction Differences

A turbocharger uses hot exhaust gases to spin a ­turbine wheel at high speeds that is connected by a short shaft to an impeller wheel inside the compressor housing. The impeller sucks air into the turbo housing, compresses it and pushes it into the engine to create boost pressure. As it is compressed, the air gets hot (sometimes excessively so), so the air exiting the turbo is usually routed through an air-to-air or air-to-water heat exchanger called an “intercooler.”

Boost pressure is controlled by a “waste gate” that opens to vent pressure once a certain level of boost has been achieved.

Turbo kits are available for many popular ­applications and greatly simplify installation issues by providing all of the hardware and plumbing that is needed to fit a particular vehicle, including higher flow fuel injectors, a higher flow fuel pump in some cases and a special tuner tool for recalibrating the ECM.

Supercharging, by comparison, typically provides more instant throttle response depending on the type of supercharger that is used. A supercharger is a belt-driven blower so it is somewhat less efficient than a turbo because it saps power from the engine to drive the blower. A turbo gets its drive energy for free from the exhaust but also creates a small amount of power-reducing backpressure that has to be overcome before it develops boost and starts to make power.

A “positive displacement” supercharger (also called a “Roots” style blower) — like that on the ZR1 Corvette, GT 500 Shelby Mustangs, Roush Mustangs and many street rods — has counter-rotating lobed rotors that force air into the engine. The boost pressure developed depends on engine speed and the underdrive ratio of the pulley on the supercharger.

By comparison, a “centrifugal” supercharger does not have counter-rotating rotors, but uses a compressor design similar to the impeller wheel on a turbocharger. Boost builds with rpm more like a turbo, but throttle response is better because of the belt-drive setup.

Supercharger kits are available for many popular street engines and typically offer a boost in performance of 150 to 200 or more horsepower — which most stock blocks can handle without having to make any additional modifications. But with higher levels of boost, things start to break and additional modifications become necessary to maintain engine reliability.

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Did You Know…

Turbos spin at extremely high speeds — up to 100,000 rpms or faster when they are making peak boost pressure. But to achieve such speeds, it takes more exhaust flow from the engine. So instant throttle response is not one of the advantages of a turbocharger. Most turbos don’t develop much boost pressure until the engine is turning 2,500 rpm or higher. Then the turbo comes on like gangbusters and starts making all kinds of power.

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Turbo Failures and Engine Issues

Turbocharger failures are often the result of poor lubrication or oil breakdown. The high temperature in the turbo exhaust housing transfers a lot of heat to the shaft bearings in the center housing. If the supply of coolant or oil to the turbo housing is restricted or lost, it can cause bearing failure. Synthetic oil is recommended for turbo engines because it can handle higher temperatures better than conventional oil. Regular oil changes are also a must.

Because turbos increase compression and power, they also increase heat and pressure inside the engine’s combustion chambers. This can make life difficult for the head gasket unless the gasket is capable of handling the extra boost.

Many head gaskets that are used in factory turbocharged engines are multi-layer steel (MLS). An MLS head gasket typically has three to five layers of steel. The external layers are usually embossed and coated with some type of high-temperature synthetic rubber, while the center layer may be flat and functions more like a shim. MLS gaskets are more durable than the typical composition head gasket, and can handle the higher temperatures and pressures in turbo applications. Aftermarket MLS head gaskets are often available as an upgrade for replacing head gaskets on many naturally aspirated engines as well as older turbocharged engines that may not have an MLS head gasket.

Original equipment MLS head gaskets usually require an extremely smooth (30 RA or less) surface finish on both the cylinder head and engine block, but most aftermarket MLS gaskets have coatings that can accommodate surface finishes that are twice as rough (60 RA).

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Trending Turbos

Though turbos have traditionally been used to boost power, lately they are also being used to boost fuel economy. Ford’s EcoBoost engines, for example, use a turbo to make a four-cylinder engine perform like a V6 while still getting the fuel economy of a four. Likewise, a pair of turbos are used on a V6 to deliver performance equivalent to a V8 without increasing fuel consumption.

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Engine Modifications

Whenever you’re customizing an engine for a customer that will employ some type of power adder (turbo or blower), at some point major upgrades or modifications will become necessary to safely handle the increase in power. What mods and how much will depend on the engine and the application. Street engines spend most of their time running under relatively light loads and only occasionally are called upon to produce maximum power. But they are expected to last tens of thousands of miles without any major problems. An engine that’s going into a drag car or some other type of race car, on the other hand, may not rack up a lot of miles in a season but the miles it runs will be hard miles at full throttle under heavy load. So it can be argued that engine durability is just as important for both types of power adder applications.

The upgrades that are necessary to handle power adders will depend on the engine and the power level the engine is built to produce. For a typical street application, changes to the stock pistons, rods and crankshaft are usually unnecessary unless a ­customer wants to make insane levels of power. Most stock block V8s can safely handle 150 to 200 extra horsepower on the street without encountering any major problems.

When an engine’s power output exceeds about 600 hp with a small block, or 800 hp with a big block, upgrades start to become mandatory with power adders.

For more on upgrades for performance engines, visit www.enginebuildermag.com.  

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