Originally Posted by
Vadim Excellent post kingtal0n! Now what kind of turbos are you dealing with? Fairly efficient T3+ or fairly inefficient stock sized T2's? My 9.5:1 SR20RR runs a GT28r, at 10-11 psi I'm running 17-18* peak (7,000 rpm). John Kerr and I were making more and more power up until that point basically. I didn't try as low as 10*, but definitely picked up a good amount of hp from original timing 14-15* at peak.
Thanks Vadim, I appreciate your enthusiasm for the subject.
Now what kind of turbos are you dealing with? Now what kind of turbos are you dealing with? Fairly efficient T3+ or fairly inefficient stock sized T2's? My 9.5:1 SR20RR runs a GT28r, at 10-11 psi I'm running 17-18* peak (7,000 rpm).
All turbochargers can act different under circumstances. Even two similar T-25s can provide vastly different results given the combination of the engine components and air path and more. Each individual car is an individual and the smaller the turbocharger gets, the more personal it gets. The faster you get a response from the combination, the more personal the wide open throttle tune becomes.
John Kerr and I were making more and more power up until that point basically. I didn't try as low as 10*, but definitely picked up a good amount of hp from original timing 14-15* at peak.
If boost is always available, even at 2000rpm, the timing map can hit any spot between 0psi and full boost anytime the engine is between 2000 and 3000, because its 2000+ there is no upper limit. It is different tuning the Idle-3000rpm range, and drive train weight plays more of a role in timing advance.
Examining your particular engine, which I assume also has a typical front mount intercooler, it is 2.0L with a water cooled GT28r garret ball bearing turbocharger on a bottom mount T-25 manifold?
It must have a full boost potential around 3600rpm.
and you forgot to mention how much torque, and where. probably when discussing the wide open throttle performance, a dyno chart should be provided for examination.
If Torque is falling because the turbine is too small and engine volumetric efficiency is suffering because of an exhaust gas pressure ratio it may be beneficial to increase the timing for more torque- because it will promote more complete combustion of the exhaust gas constituents
in the cylinder reducing the heat production of the turbocharger. If you are already timed at best torque, obviously you will not add more timing. The only fix for that situation is a larger turbine, or a improved wastegate. Sometimes more boost works, if the compressor can handle it. The exhaust pressure would go up, but so would the intake manifold pressure. If you get more mass on the intake side into the cylinder and burned then of course the engine will make more torque if the fuel quality allows for the blatant increase in compression ratio.
Anything you can do to reduce the temperature of the turbocharger while demanding performance from the turbocharger will cause the exhaust gasses to take up less space. Which is exactly what a turbocharger needs when the temperature is so high that the pressure is rising in the exhaust manifold to a significant height. Heat is beneficial when trying to get the turbocharger to spin, for the same reason in reverse. The largest mass of hottest as possible air in the combustion chamber makes the most torque- if fuel quality allows. n-heptane is 0 octane, do you think that would work? The reason we usually try to cool the incoming air is because low temperatures lower the sensitivity to fuel quality, AND colder air contains more mass per unit area. Spraying water or methanol into the engine is an extreme example of intercoolering. The idea is to increase the mass of air caught between the valves and start the reaction at the right instant to get the best possible use of the expanding gasses. Increasing the compression ratio at any time (especially by altering the head or piston) will always give you more torque, until fuel quality limits.
If the torque is failing due to anemia, that is, poor valvetrain performance, the turbo will not be getting hotter if it is large enough. Your particular engine would be held back significantly around 7,000rpm if it has a stock valvetrain and head. The oem sr20det cams always have a trouble with making good VE(volumetric efficiency) after 5500rpm. When VE is lower, it is ok to add timing, just like when you cruise, and maybe not for the same reason. When you cruise, VE is very very low, maybe 25% or less, and air fuel ratio is lean. When you are at WOT, and VE is low, the air fuel ratio is rich, AND VE is still above 100% on a turbo application. At 10psi on that engine you would expect about 170% VE around 5500rpm. Maybe more if it's a redtop with the oem long runner intake. A 12:1 Rich condition cools things off in the engine, egt usually drops, and ultimately results with less horsepower. From a chemistry point of view, the reason that you add timing when VE is dropping is comparing only these: compression, [temperature + fuel quality].
1. Dynamic compression is lower when VE drops.
2. temperature is controlled and lowered by a 12:1 rich condition, and fuel quality has the final say.
A fuel like ethanol has properties that make it a better choice for high performance turbocharged applications, and having issues with heat is much less likely. So using a fairly small turbocharger on a small displacement 2.0L engine with fuel properties that include excellent control of temperature results with better performance.
Now consider our 93 octane pump gas in the above situation. If your best torque number starts dropping because of this exact situation, (VE drops and 12:1) You can do one of two things. You can either bring the air fuel ratio up, (and thus the temperature), and the engine will make more torque. Also, you can increase ignition timing, and that will ALMOST ALWAYS give you more torque- with the one demand that the pressure in the combustion chamber occurs when the connecting rod is in a position to accept the force. And that happens AROUND Top Dead Center, but for each individual engine, because of varying rod and stroke combinations, and weight and even metallic properties, (and more) is different.
The reason this involves fuel type is because when advancing the ignition timing you are moving the starting point of the combustion process sooner, and different fuel qualitys have different reaction rates. there is a rate limiting step somewhere in the process, otherwise it would always happen instantaneously. Both cooling it off to (12:1) and decreasing the compression ratio both have the effect of lowering the reaction rate, which could be compensated by with an earlier ignition point.
In your particular situation, if you had FOUND best torque already previously around 5500rpm, whatever maximum timing displayed there at that point might also be slower than necessary for best torque when compression starts to fall. On the other hand...
There are other reasons to consider adding timing is when the engine needs it strictly due to rpm increase. This could be because of actual timing at the crankshaft beginning to waver from displayed values on a computer- (have you actually verified the engine timing at 7,000rpm? That sounds dangerous and difficult even on a dyno) Or because of one of many other reasons, as I will quote
patprimmer (Publican)
30 Jul 07 9:04
The advance rate is not linear to rpm.
The advance does not always increase with rpm, and at very high rpm, some engines respond to some top end retard.
Some factors that change burn rate are, compression ratio, charge temperature, a:f ratio, fuel particle size and degree of vaporisation.
Typically at around 3000 rpm, the turbulence increases burn rate to an extent that no further advance is required.
http://www.eng-tips.com/viewthread.cfm?qid=193560
Always good to have results to analyze to figure things out. If you want I will post some of mine.
Also
http://www.contactmagazine.com/Issue54/EngineBasics.html
I just want to add that I literally googled those two websites at the original time of this posting. The information is out there, some of it is accurate, but what really is truly for every single engine in turn? I just felt those two websites were helpful from the frame of mind of the original question, as to be helpful when discussing ignition timing and detonation.
The overall syntrast, comparison, meaning of this post is a more general look at combustion engines as individual exceptions to each rule in turn. You modify something- you break a different rule.
The combustion of gasoline involves intermediates. To be honest, I am not a gasoline inspector, but I could imagine that different fuels (93 octane) from different sources will sometimes give different results. But they all say 93, and they are all mostly just light 8 carbon chains. Sometimes (usually?) there are additives.