Is that @Glassreflectionzn54 car?
How in the world does any turbos blow up a motor lmao. the motor blew up cause we pushed 31 psi at 6300 rpm with 17.5 T snall turbos. That's it. If you had told me hey bro I told you that methanol system was bad but you didnt listen then it's one thing, but turbos had nothing to do with the motor. Pure stage 2 high flows did the same thing at the same boost recently for a guy I know on 31 psi it was a 335is blew the motor exact same way. Btw the motor went out after the pull and we found out I hurt the motor because transmition was slipping and recorded 7500 rpm 3 days prior when i was racing two GTRs. It just finished at the dyno. There is thousands of ebay cheap turbos but they are not blowing up the motor right? They just go out which is pain to swap. Just need bigger turbos and less boostLol install them can’t wait to see u pop again after. Tried to help u man. You would think someone would be smart enough to listen to someone who helped develop them and beta tested multiple sets all junk! I got $1000 says u pop motor again
So you're saying some company started selling hybrid turbos, swore up and down they had magic sauce in them, he doesn't go on forums, had resellers spamming his stuff everywhere, and his product is shit? Weren't there lots of people putting their names on the line acting like they knew something everyone else didn't know for ten years?
Btw this is what the car did the 3 days before the dyno. Turbos were effing amazing for so long I couldn't be more happier. This was 29 psi of boost VS FBO E85 GTR. The only decent run we had since the tranny was slipping because if custom tune. Not the tune but the shift points were changed. After that day we fixed it but the motor was not
I know exactly what you mean, we installed stage 2 daw turbos and have been super happy with them as well as couple other buddy's that have them. We were at 29 psi for a while and oh man I loved how they performed! No issues with them at all! We shouldn't have turned the boost to 30 psi at high rpms but it's ok we learned! Just need to lower the boost a bit or get bigger twins and keep it at 27 psi that way I can be 650 to 670 whp and be on the safe sideI have no doubt that some of them perform and probably will even last. Its the fact that hybrids have the reputation for failing at an alarming rate. Even with some mistreatment, that absolutely shouldn't happen. People classify failures with a very narrow scope:
Confirmed Failures:
Unconfirmed Failures:
- There is evidence they broke for reasons solely due to the parts themselves
Basically, the parts fail all the time but doesn't ever fall into anyone's tiny scope of confirmed failures and that changes the failure rate, making it look really good. This translates to, you might have to pay installation labor three or four times before you get a set that works and each set doesn't count as a failure by anyone's specific definition. This is why I like the speedtech kit, its finally something within most people's budgets and you DO NOT hear the same person needing to uninstall and reinstall the turbo over and over for warranty reasons or smoking reasons etc. There is a reason for that. I know someone personally who had three sets of one brand of hybrids fail before going single turbo. They just don't get anything by talking about it, it hurts them financially and their ability to get a warranty or even sell the warrantied parts when they give up on them.
- Parts failed but we don't trust the report
- There could be outside influences which may impact the failure
- No proof the parts were at fault
- Authorized installer not used
- Didn't run an assortment of authorized supporting parts
- Turbos failed but owner would suffer financial penalties by mentioning it
Personally, I believe that trying to take a part and modify and run it at such a high level you're basically running a glass cannon. Breathing on them the wrong way when installing or balancing them leading to issues down the road shouldn't be acceptable. Way back when, it was estimated the power ceiling would be much lower, yet here we are. Perhaps they thought about that power ceiling in terms of long term reliability, not peak power performance. Continuing to move the performance needle leads to an increase in reliability issues, I'm not really sure how this is surprising.
I know exactly what you mean, we installed stage 2 daw turbos and have been super happy with them as well as couple other buddy's that have them. We were at 29 psi for a while and oh man I loved how they performed! No issues with them at all! We shouldn't have turned the boost to 30 psi at high rpms but it's ok we learned! Just need to lower the boost a bit or get bigger twins and keep it at 27 psi that way I can be 650 to 670 whp and be on the safe side
so far any guys that installed them including me have not had any issues up to this point. I will take out my engine soon and see how the turbos hold up. Hopefully it didnt damage them. The turbos didnt make any rattle or noises, boosted very strong at 30 psi. Wdgc was high 60s and just touching 70 wdgc. Have logs of lots of pullsSo do you know any one who has had to remove their turbos for one reason or another? How many?
This was mine on 27-29 psi before retune. I am gutted a lot though. AGAINST 770 WHP ctsv that traps 137 mph and runs low 10sSo getting back to the title of the thread (there are already too many on stage2s and barneys over reliable or not brand bitching) Do we yet have any results from stage 4s that indicate they are genuinely able to make 850HP?
Like 9second/140mph+ 1/4 mile in a full weight 335i ect...
Are there any people left running them?
This is the thing that baffles me so much with the N54. This kind of turbo pressure just screams inefficiency and short term reliability. Unfortunately I've had some issues getting to completed with the port/polish head for the Z4 so my TD04 twins and related upgrade parts are all on a shelf until that is cleared up. But my hope is to be at 600whp on emix and be just under 20psi. Possible? Not sure. But tons of boost just tells me the engine is not set up to make the power. And the N54 as designed, is not made to make this power reliably, IMHO.Just need to lower the boost a bit or get bigger twins and keep it at 27 psi that way I can be 650 to 670 whp and be on the safe side
I know what you mean. But even 25 psi is going to be reliable. If mine were boosted high and had lots of abuse over 22 psi and then 29-30 psi for a while. 24 psi would last you a long long timeThis is the thing that baffles me so much with the N54. This kind of turbo pressure just screams inefficiency and short term reliability. Unfortunately I've had some issues getting to completed with the port/polish head for the Z4 so my TD04 twins and related upgrade parts are all on a shelf until that is cleared up. But my hope is to be at 600whp on emix and be just under 20psi. Possible? Not sure. But tons of boost just tells me the engine is not set up to make the power. And the N54 as designed, is not made to make this power reliably, IMHO.
Maybe more so with a big single, for sure. Seems much tougher with twins. Glad it is working for you, but I don't see 27+psi in my future - I think it is working the wrong end of the problem
Filippo
For the most part I agree with you, though I don't think PSI in itself is specifically the issue and moreso the psi in regards to the turbos being used. It is baffling to me too though that so many people on this platform would rather run the cheapest turbos they can find, then just overspin them and risk doing more serious and expensive damage in the future just to save a couple bucks at the time of purchase. The stock turbo frames/housings certainly should not be run at that high of a boost pressure, especially since it's been shown over and over again that it's going to drastically reduce the lifespan of the turbos due to heat, backpressure etc. It's undeniably going to be better to use almost anything else for the extra HP at that point if you need to push your turbo(s) to within an inch of their life. I think spinning turbos up to ~30+ psi is probably fine for most of the larger sized housing turbos that aren't "true hybrids", though that obviously still opens up another can of worms or two - but even 27psi is higher than I'd go for stock housing turbos if I was planning to use them for anything other than a glory run or dedicated strip car.This is the thing that baffles me so much with the N54. This kind of turbo pressure just screams inefficiency and short term reliability. Unfortunately I've had some issues getting to completed with the port/polish head for the Z4 so my TD04 twins and related upgrade parts are all on a shelf until that is cleared up. But my hope is to be at 600whp on emix and be just under 20psi. Possible? Not sure. But tons of boost just tells me the engine is not set up to make the power. And the N54 as designed, is not made to make this power reliably, IMHO.
Maybe more so with a big single, for sure. Seems much tougher with twins. Glad it is working for you, but I don't see 27+psi in my future - I think it is working the wrong end of the problem
Filippo
A guy not long ago had a nice 335is and his blew the same exact way as mine with Pure Turbos stage 2 High Flows at exact same boost as me. 31 psi. Both of our motors blew same way after did the whole pull and then after the pull 2 seconds later when they let off the gas they said bye byeFor the most part I agree with you, though I don't think PSI in itself is specifically the issue and moreso the psi in regards to the turbos being used. It is baffling to me too though that so many people on this platform would rather run the cheapest turbos they can find, then just overspin them and risk doing more serious and expensive damage in the future just to save a couple bucks at the time of purchase. The stock turbo frames/housings certainly should not be run at that high of a boost pressure, especially since it's been shown over and over again that it's going to drastically reduce the lifespan of the turbos due to heat, backpressure etc. It's undeniably going to be better to use almost anything else for the extra HP at that point if you need to push your turbo(s) to within an inch of their life. I think spinning turbos up to ~30+ psi is probably fine for most of the larger sized housing turbos that aren't "true hybrids", though that obviously still opens up another can of worms or two - but even 27psi is higher than I'd go for stock housing turbos if I was planning to use them for anything other than a glory run or dedicated strip car.
Pures, even fully optioned out stage 2s, are still stock turbo housings and 31psi is still higher than those should be run at too imo. It's not at all surprising to hear that engines have blown from that combination, especially stock engines. Torque is what kills our motors and those small turbos when run at high boost (especially if it's set up with aggressive spooling) produce high torque levels and do it very quickly, which is a good recipe for destroying an engine.A guy not long ago had a nice 335is and his blew the same exact way as mine with Pure Turbos stage 2 High Flows at exact same boost as me. 31 psi. Both of our motors blew same way after did the whole pull and then after the pull 2 seconds later when they let off the gas they said bye bye
Yes, your right, that's why I was thinking to get the stage 4 turbos that are true TD04 (46mm wheel and 52 mm compressor rear wheel) and keep it at 26, maybe just maybe 27 psi max, that way they spool longer then the stage 2, and will be a lot easier on motor and transmission, but hopefully make 650 to 670 wheel horsepower l be super happy. What you think?Pures, even fully optioned out stage 2s, are still stock turbo housings and 31psi is still higher than those should be run at too imo. It's not at all surprising to hear that engines have blown from that combination, especially stock engines. Torque is what kills our motors and those small turbos when run at high boost (especially if it's set up with aggressive spooling) produce high torque levels and do it very quickly, which is a good recipe for destroying an engine.
I just don't see the point in running either of those or similar sets at such high boost, even aside from the heat problem I mentioned earlier they just do not flow enough to run well at that level. You're looking at heavily diminishing returns at that boost level and the turbos struggle to maintain that boost level at the end of the RPM range anyway. I would not push any twins smaller than any of the true TD04 twins (Hydra HP800, MMP S3 or 1K, RB GF, VTT GC) at anything passed ~25-26psi in 99% of situations. Honestly pushing passed 30psi on anything isn't a great idea unless running a built engine, but at least a larger turbo(s) wouldn't be choking themselves and would still show appreciable gains from the extra boost.