Elevation and the Turbocharger (very technical)
Elevation and the turbocharger. This is a very technical and long read. I hope it makes sense to you guys, I tried to make it as clear as possible so it is easy to read and understand. Feel free to share your experiences as well!
I have been told by many people that changes in elevation do not affect a turbocharged engine. I decided to look deeper into this because I have seen real-world data that says this is false. Looking simply at the variables in front of you, one can come to the assumption that the engine should be unaffected as long as total absolute pressure remains the same. I have heard wild calculations for “turbocharged engine” output at elevation, and I will go into this and hopefully we can all learn a lot from it.
I live at 4500ft. The ambient pressure here is 12.5psia average. Sea level is around 14.7psia. Psia stands for PSI absolute, meaning total pressure. Psig stands for PSI gauge, or pressure above ambient (boost). Psig is usually what is used to control boost levels, and is the pressure your gauge reads. In short, psig is boost or pressure above ambient. By looking at these two numbers you can see that there is an 18% difference in pressure between 4500ft and sea level. 14.7/12.5=1.18. SAE correction factors take this difference of air pressure into account when calculating HP at high altitude. At SAE temperature and 0% humidity you should have approx 18% more power at sea level than at 4500ft.
So the difference in air pressure is 2.2psia or 18%. Bare with me here because these numbers are going to throw you off a little unless you have a good understanding of turbochargers. Let’s take an engine that has boost, for this example we are going to use 6psig. Add the ambient pressures and find the difference in psia: 6+12.5=18.5psia and 6+14.7=20.7psia so 20.7/18.5=1.12. Notice the difference here is only 12%. Again, 14.7/12.5=1.18, an 18% difference in pressure; and with boost only 12% difference in pressure. You can see now that the difference in pressure goes down as boost pressure goes up. Let’s look at the difference in pressure when running 25psig boost: 30+12.5=42.5psia at high alt and 30+14.7=44.7psia. There is still a 2psia difference in total pressure, but the difference between the two here is only 5% at this point. Some have used this math to determine that the turbocharged engine is affected less by elevation the higher the boost goes. I have also heard by many people that the SAE correction factor shouldn’t be applied to turbocharged engines at high altitude for this reason.
This makes sense until you dig deeper into the understanding here. By comparing the difference in total pressure, you are comparing the engines power output directly to total pressure. Let’s do the reverse calculation for an engine at 20K feet. Ambient pressure is only 7psi at this point. 14.7/7=2.1 or 210%. Wow, 210% correction? So at sea level you would be making 2.1 times the power than at 20K feet right? This relation does not make any sense in the real world. This is comparing the difference in air pressure directly to the power the engine will make. 7psia is half the pressure of ambient at sea level (14.7), so you must have half the power? 1 bar of boost must double your NA power then?
I have been told by many people that changes in elevation do not affect a turbocharged engine. I decided to look deeper into this because I have seen real-world data that says this is false. Looking simply at the variables in front of you, one can come to the assumption that the engine should be unaffected as long as total absolute pressure remains the same. I have heard wild calculations for “turbocharged engine” output at elevation, and I will go into this and hopefully we can all learn a lot from it.
I live at 4500ft. The ambient pressure here is 12.5psia average. Sea level is around 14.7psia. Psia stands for PSI absolute, meaning total pressure. Psig stands for PSI gauge, or pressure above ambient (boost). Psig is usually what is used to control boost levels, and is the pressure your gauge reads. In short, psig is boost or pressure above ambient. By looking at these two numbers you can see that there is an 18% difference in pressure between 4500ft and sea level. 14.7/12.5=1.18. SAE correction factors take this difference of air pressure into account when calculating HP at high altitude. At SAE temperature and 0% humidity you should have approx 18% more power at sea level than at 4500ft.
So the difference in air pressure is 2.2psia or 18%. Bare with me here because these numbers are going to throw you off a little unless you have a good understanding of turbochargers. Let’s take an engine that has boost, for this example we are going to use 6psig. Add the ambient pressures and find the difference in psia: 6+12.5=18.5psia and 6+14.7=20.7psia so 20.7/18.5=1.12. Notice the difference here is only 12%. Again, 14.7/12.5=1.18, an 18% difference in pressure; and with boost only 12% difference in pressure. You can see now that the difference in pressure goes down as boost pressure goes up. Let’s look at the difference in pressure when running 25psig boost: 30+12.5=42.5psia at high alt and 30+14.7=44.7psia. There is still a 2psia difference in total pressure, but the difference between the two here is only 5% at this point. Some have used this math to determine that the turbocharged engine is affected less by elevation the higher the boost goes. I have also heard by many people that the SAE correction factor shouldn’t be applied to turbocharged engines at high altitude for this reason.
This makes sense until you dig deeper into the understanding here. By comparing the difference in total pressure, you are comparing the engines power output directly to total pressure. Let’s do the reverse calculation for an engine at 20K feet. Ambient pressure is only 7psi at this point. 14.7/7=2.1 or 210%. Wow, 210% correction? So at sea level you would be making 2.1 times the power than at 20K feet right? This relation does not make any sense in the real world. This is comparing the difference in air pressure directly to the power the engine will make. 7psia is half the pressure of ambient at sea level (14.7), so you must have half the power? 1 bar of boost must double your NA power then?