'98 CSVT #4012- T-Red MNB 117k
-3L's of Fury... 223hp/214tq
-MSDS Headers & y-pipe, Opt. TB, Tune
'98 Ford Contour- PT Zetec ATX- Pushing just over 355... Thousand miles that is.
-It sounds like someone on crack sending morse code
TZT Performance http://www.tztperformance.com/
officially a troll. '93 3000GT VR4 #2229/2595
'00 Black SVTC #391 - sold 5/1/10
'97 GL Turbo Zetec - gone
Exactly.
Stock Zetec with stock head, cams, and intake manifold = 20psi for 300HP
Zetec with FRPP head, turbo cams, cam gears and FRPP intake = 12psi for 300HP
More psi doesn't mean more power necessarily.
Having a better flowing motor also magnifies the power. The FRPP Zetec at 20psi would be putting down 400HP.![]()
Just look at the SVT Zetec guys on the Focus forums. They are hitting 300-350WHP.
BP
Last edited by ButtonPuncher; 02-20-2008 at 08:34 PM.
--'96 GL * MTX Zetec-- SOLD! 3-12-2011
--- '06 Mazda 6s * 3L Duratec * 6-speed ATX * Lapis Blue ---
FOR SALE >> T3 Super 60 Turbo - Coated Focus Manifold - 42# FRPP Injectors - Focus CFM Throttle Body << FOR SALE (PM me)
'98 CSVT #4012- T-Red MNB 117k
-3L's of Fury... 223hp/214tq
-MSDS Headers & y-pipe, Opt. TB, Tune
'98 Ford Contour- PT Zetec ATX- Pushing just over 355... Thousand miles that is.
-It sounds like someone on crack sending morse code
doesnt matter, PSI is irrelevant to how much power a car will make. different compressors move different amounts of air at different pressures.
you can have a T3 turbo that moves 25lbs of air/minute at 10psi and you can have a T4 turbo that moves say 30+ lbs of air/minute at 10PSI. the T4 will produce more power at the same boost pressure.
note: those numbers are just guesses, they may or may not be accurate.
TZT Performance http://www.tztperformance.com/
officially a troll. '93 3000GT VR4 #2229/2595
'00 Black SVTC #391 - sold 5/1/10
'97 GL Turbo Zetec - gone
the top mount jrsc they discontinued, right???? I've gone to their site and all they are advertising is the rotrex deal, here's a pic...
![]()
JamesMason1
2006 Fusion NPG V6 S/C Eaton MP90, 38# injectors, trans and aftercooler (10.5# boost)
Your name is no longer on the prison cell, the cell door is open, so don't use it as a pantry for spices to stir a hot mess up in your life.
A couple of basic things here.
Zetec engines rev reasonably high. High revving engines that are RELIABLE (i.e hondas) have a short stroke. Increasing bore slightly is okay, but only a hair. A blown engine will maintain a higher temperature than a naturally aspirated engine. With that in mind, you don't want cylinderwalls to expand beyond tolerances and cause some real problems. Not to mention that there will be less mass between the chambers to absorb harmonics.
Centrifugal blowers are the worst forms of FI to use on any automotive engine. Period. Centrifugal blowers take time to build boost, and as such, do not generate any substantial (if any) low end gains (i.e torque), modest mid-end gains, and a reasonable top end for about 10% of your power-band.
A centrifugal blower is only 'sort of acceptable' on OHV engines such as 302 or 350. Those have two-valve heads and cannot breath for- which is whey they create a lot of torque and require massive work to get them to breath on-par with an otherwise stock 4 valve OHC head. The engine will naturally create good low-end torque, and breath half-assidly (new word!) at mid range - the centrifugal blower will add some range and give it top-end that it didn't have before, so it would end-up feeling more like the engine got opened up to breath well enough to claim much of its volumetric efficiency.
We don't have poor breathing cam-in-block OHV engines, so we should strongly consider this when wishing to modify them.
A roots-type blower, on the other hand, will give you much desired low-end torque the instant that you hit the gas pedal. Positive displacement air pumps are nice like that. They aren't as thermo efficient as a centrifugal or turbo charger, because the compress the air in your entire in-take system, starting from the intake valves back to the helix of the blower. For lower boost levels (Typically 6-9psi) roots-types are just fine for most engines. If you really want more boost and power, then a properly matched turbo is going to out-shine a blower in most instances.
4-valve heads, as a rule, don't benefit greatly from 'head work'. The factory design is already greatly superior to most 2-valves OHV engine, even after major surgery. Forced induction thrives off of cams with little or no over-lap. Thus, a typical 'economy cam' that is found in most cars is actually going to be the /best/ cam for creating most idea rates with VE and thermal efficiency.
TZT Performance http://www.tztperformance.com/
officially a troll. '93 3000GT VR4 #2229/2595
'00 Black SVTC #391 - sold 5/1/10
'97 GL Turbo Zetec - gone
Well, for the sake of due and proper of understanding, I had to add this. The temperature IS the direct catalyst for the difference in numbers. When (i.e, RPM range) the air pressure raises or falls is relevant to over-all performance, but not-so-much the numbers that people are interested in.
Compressor maps are great tools for understanding and interpreting threshold, power-band, and thermo-deficiencies in the system. A dyno will determine the HP.
I'm not trying to be a dick at all, don't read me wrong. I just would like to clarify and substantiate things from the correct engineering perspective.. that's all.
![]()
Last edited by Kresnik; 02-21-2008 at 02:45 PM.
Bookmarks