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Thread: best place to buy a Synapse Synchronic wastegate

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2008-09-03 08:48:01
#1
best place to buy a Synapse Synchronic wastegate
ok where is the best/cheapest place to buy a Synapse Synchronic wastegate? post place, links and price if possible. Thanks

i would prefer someone that will ship to Australia, otherwise if its cheap enough i will hook someone up with a finders fee if they want to ship for me


looking at a 50mm version, i am wanting to push 400-500whp so thinking the 50mm might be more suited
2008-09-03 17:04:28
#2
I called Synapse directly and spoke with the engineer for an hour.

He is innovating, as the steel specificity of the metals used within the valve, in particular; have been the primary cause of wastegate failure, by known manufacturers, here in the USA.

It is all about the cost of nickel and reducing nickel content, from the valve metallurgy, by the foreign or US supplier. This lack of quality, is causing the low-nickel valves and wastegate seals to warp easier, and still meet ISO and ASTME specs. Hard to believe they can cut corners and still meet "specified materials", under any standard, yet it is being done to save a buck by contract component manufacturers and is a major problem, for us all.

Synapse said he re-designed the valve guides, so a returning wastegate valve cannot warp or bend leaving a gap, at the valve seal. His work sounded very thorough, removing the diaphragm, yet the added adjustability has not been reported as affordable or necessary, by anyone using it on an SR20, to the best of my knowledge. (obviously, getting screwed with a low-nickel valve and seal by a famous W/G manufacturer, is the last thing any of us would consider, while we re-build our entire turbine systems, or swap expensive manifolds, assuming problems being created from other items exists.

What if the "best known brand" of wastegate, is unwittingly using crap stainless?

*****************************

Why you think you need such a massive Wastegate is beyond me and here is why I feel this way; below is a link to one of the fastest, ultra-high hp engine builders in the USA. Tom uses ONE 42mm Innovative gate, to make 1500+ hp, on a very special street legal v-8. (Innovative has moved and there is a new site being built, so if you want to compare oranges, you might call Tom for the new number for Innovative, or whatever they call themselves now). {This company is NOT "INNOVATE", the crap electronics company, selling Cheap electronic engine controls}.


****************

Why anyone thinks they require a 50mm gate, unless they are breathing alcohol in a 500CI twin turbo-charged engine, is beyond me.

Read this article and then do some asking around by folks who understand physics of Turbine pressurization techniques.

I can understand needing to use a slightly larger gate, if your manifold is biased for the wastegate. If your manifold is biased for the manifold, then a smaller wastegate is in order; but do you know the difference and are you sure your engine requires such a huge vent, to control spooling; based on the size of your turbo and manifold?

Or are you guessing?

********************************

High HP sr20 engines often use a 92mm full-stroker crank and riser-block, with a Cosworth Crank, (or alternative brands) and Cosworth race bearings. But the head gasket Tom makes, (see article), is far better than any layered steel gaskets you will find, even at Cosworth. Yet they will be happy to sell you the multi-layered steel gaskets, even though they might not hold up to your expensive internals, under massive boost. Then there is gasket thickness, to make it even more confusing.

The specified head gasket system discussed in the article linked below, requires machining of the head to make groves for special steel, perfect circle o-rings. I assume they are not cheap, either, but at 25-35 lbs. of boost, with a full bored T-4, you will be glad you made the investment. They sink into the copper and really cover your but, under massive head pressure.

Sealant or gasket coating choice is key, using this head gasket system and the article was nice enough to provide almost all the tricks and details.

Here is some of the information which confirms choice of the CORRECT gate size, is really important, or the spikes and lags, everyone always complains about, cannot be fully understood or controlled.

And I quote;

"The annoying thing about Tom Nelson is that he won't share his turbo specs beyond telling us they're 72mm, they are NOT ball-bearing style, and they're from Innovative Turbo Systems. We'll add that the exhaust trim and housing configuration are what most people-including Rick, Head of Innovative-consider pure race stuff, too serious for street or strip use under 1,000 hp. But Nelson swears that his happy customers can't be wrong." -end quote.

Here's the thread where I found these tricks, explaining how to build the sickest daily-driver v-8, ever designed. This article has several tricks you may want to consider, if you are seriously asking about this size wastegate and when it is required:

http://www.hotrod.com/projectbuild/h...ild/index.html

I can only assume, several of the tricks listed on this write-up, will conflict with the many versions of build techniques, we are being told to "try" to make high HP, from vendors selling stuff, they may not, in fact; use themselves.

The $5000.00 plenum, gag, is one of the more expensive mods, I have ever heard of, for a street rod, yet look at the results.

****************

Synapse, although revealing metallurgy issues, as being the primary cause of known manufacturer and /or wastegate failure, still requires extra money and many expensive hours of dyno time, since it is adjustable into six configurations.

Until I hear anyone successfully dyno-ing on-the-cheap, using a Synapse, (on a high quality AEM standalone or equivalent), the thought of endless hours of re-setting the synapse, no matter how much better adjustability is supposed to be, my original presumption of using a very high quality wastegate, properly sized for the exact flow dynamics of your engine, might be cheaper, in the long run, than tuning the synapse, endlessly. (So the $289.00 38mm gates with crappy steel valves and guides, just might be where our forum builders are having constant vacuum leaks, on the exhaust side, and not on the intake side, alone.

How can anyone require a gate larger than 42mm on any SR20 engine, when a sick-o twin turbo v-8 is just fine, with one 42mm gate?

What do the rest of you have to say on this matter and what do you think about the copper / steel o-ring head gasket system, using Time-Certs, Cosworth crank / bearings and GM / 1/2 inch ARP head and crank studs?

Is the head gasket system worth the expense if we can contain an extra 10-25 lbs. of boost?

(yah, I know carbon-fiber axles, three layered clutch plates and expensive balanced transmission internals become factors. Yet blown head gaskets are a recurring issue here.)

*********************

Has anyone made consistent, high pressure boost, on a stock head, using just laminated steel gaskets?

If so, then how long has your engine made sick power, before the head gasket or wastegate became the issue?

*********************

Maybe the head gasket system used by Tom, and choice of a high quality wastegate, would do us all better, for a longer lasting engine?

Will anyone who knows the exact steel composition of todays version of a brand new Tial and / or other "quality" wastegate manufacturers, please chime in here? What have our known suppliers got to say about low-nickel warping, or failing seals, on what used to be the standard of quality?

It sounds like we need to get to the bottom of who is selling crap and who is confusing the ordeal, just to waste our money on poorly designed or excessively expensive parts, which do not add up to quality or a long lasting engine design. Fake Tials are not the only problem, according to Synapse.
it is the guts which might be crap, in an official housing. True or not?

******************************

We really need to get the bottom of the wastegate quality debate, properly defined by experts, so we do not make costly mistakes and continue to blow expensive engines, by choosing failed or sub-standard parts, (unless of course, you are sticking to a "low dollar build" and do not expect quality or longevity, in the first place).

Please pardon me for not directly answering your question, yet the details of choosing this new Synapse, seem a bit cloudy at this time, in my humble opinion.

We need to see the true cost of dyno-ing the Synapse, beyond the part cost alone, so it doesn't end up proving three times as much cash to tune it, just to get quality wastegate valves and seals. There are options, yet so few of the forum members share these details openly.

If anyone has the new Innovative engineering web-site, I would really appreciate the link, since they are obviously capable of manufacturing a very fine wastegate. I am very glad I own one.

Why don't forum vendors sell them or offer the o-rings and machining to build a stock head, (NOT a $900.00 VE Head), which is capable of increased boost pressure?

(VE guys should benefit from the same tricks, but they first have to spend the dosh on a $900.00 head, and then machine for steel rings, copper gaskets and high quality wastegate seals).

Can we make high quality HP using stock heads, spending hard-earned-money on improving the head gasket concept / the methods of fastening it to the block; instead of swapping to VE heads, and still having head gasket and wastegate leakage, causing problems anyways?

Will this mod, make stock heads meet the need for speed? Or will machining for copper and o-rings become cost prohibitive/ vs HP gains AND reliability?
2008-09-03 17:08:44
#3
Originally Posted by ca18
ok where is the best/cheapest place to buy a Synapse Synchronic wastegate? post place, links and price if possible. Thanks

i would prefer someone that will ship to Australia, otherwise if its cheap enough i will hook someone up with a finders fee if they want to ship for me


looking at a 50mm version, i am wanting to push 400-500whp so thinking the 50mm might be more suited


I'm only running a TiAL 44mm wastegate on a 3076R. IMO, that is almost a perfect match. They say in general terms, the larger the turbo, and the lower the boost, the larger the gate you need. The smaller the turbo, the higher the boost, the smaller the gate you need.

In other words, if you're running say a 3071R, and you plan on running 15 or so psi daily, you wouldn't need a larger gate.

I may be off on this, but that's the bare minimum basic that stuck in my head.
2008-09-03 18:13:48
#4
^^^^^^ He's right. I don't think most people understand that a larger turbo and lower boost equals a higher volume at the WG, and therefore necessitates a larger WG. Most people equate high boost with a bigger valve, when it's really in reverse. Moto makes good points, and I agree that unless you're using some ridiculously large turbo at a very low boost, you just don't need that volume, and it may actually start to hurt your spool. You want balance between spool control and flow at opening. Remember that the WG is before the turbo, and if it's so large that it starts affecting your spool, your boost will fluctuate highly and become difficult to tune. I'd stick with a 42mm gate from a well-known and trusted manufacturer, and I have to concur that Innovative makes a wicked one. However, for most of us home garage guys, something decent like TiAl will get you by just fine. There are lots in that range if you don't like the Tial by brand... At any case, I found some synapse valves here:

http://www.maperformance.com/synapse-50mm-vband-wastegate.html

http://www.hamotorsportsusa.com/sysywa5.html (looks like this one's $25 cheaper than the other sites)

http://www.cimotorsports.net/motor-sport-products/synapse-engineering-50mm-vband-wastegate.html
2008-09-03 19:23:10
#5
I have not read the articles since I am pretty sure they are intertesting and may end up late in fixing the sink if I do so.

With gates you can get away using one gate on any setup as long as your design is wg prioritized.The general rule as Teks mentioned is correct(the 44mm gate from Tial seems to be the neutral choice) I myself have a divided T4 with a divided manifold with 2 50mm gates. My setup is not wg prioritized and using the 2 gates on my system is what I "wanted". Granted I am not aimimg for a DD 1000+whp 4 banger. I just put my system together for what I know will be efficient.

I have used Tial before and they are okay. Synapse has a diff design but its not new. JGS(the gates I am using now) uses a similar design...

O-ringing the block is a good solution. I was looking into this a few years ago with Benson sleeves. However now you can get a PE/Mazworx big bore H/G that is not the normal H/G you see and hold 40lbs of boost all day paired with 1/2" head studs .
2008-09-03 21:13:54
#6
ok first of all i do understand the concept of big turbo/ small boost.......hence my choice for a 50mm, as i will be running a 50 trim with the 10 blade stage 3 rear, .63 rear housing and to4e front cover and will be a daily driver, so thought the bigger gate will come in handy for running lower boost. However i have thought i might need to toughen up princess and use my lead foot a bit more as a boost controler in daily driven circumstances. So have been considering the 40mm. The size of the gate has nothing to do with possible power made, in fact you will make the most power with no gate....just dont expect parts to last.

i am considering the 40mm version too, and may end up going that. the tial 44mm would be a gate of good size really. in fact i may even end up running one, as it was what i originally was going to.

however i like the design of the synapse, and not many people down here run them yet, so i thought i would give it a try. It is also why i posted on here, as i know this site is has many Americans and being an American product feedback would be better on here


so i will reword my question, what is the best value for money gate? for my set up how much and where from?

also i am using a ve head
2008-09-03 23:14:46
#7
Get a Tial 44mm or JGS gate...
2008-09-04 05:06:34
#8
I am likewise a fan of Tial and JGS. I've never seen anyone using them have trouble.
2008-09-04 12:21:49
#9
I will be runing a Tial 38 with my set up
2008-09-04 21:17:26
#10
hnn not much love for the synapse, any reason why? or is it just the dyno time?

i like the look of that jgs one, but does the 40mm run a piston/ o ring as well? or just the 50mm? the price diff between them all is pretty similar, not that i am willing to cheap out anyway, but dont wana waste $$$. my car will be spending a bit of time on the dyno so that doesn't bother me too much
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