Volvo Project - Part 2 [ February 7th, 2011 ] By: Mark Ozimek Posted in » Ramblings

I mentioned in part 1 that I have a hard time making up my mind. This is the story of how I came to decide what turbo should get bolted up to the engine to get me to where I want to go. Be forewarned: A lot of text lies ahead. I’ll do my best to be interesting as I tell the (not so) enthralling tale.

As a point of reference in all this, for those who are unfamiliar with the Volvo powertrain, the stock shortblock seems to be good for around 600hp without sleeving, assuming the engine tune is good and heat is managed properly. Beyond that, the cylinder liners have a tendency to crack where they touch the next cylinder. The 5 speed transmission, M56H, is reliable for around that much as well, and can handle more, although gear and bearing life is rapidly declining at that point.

Originally, I was aiming for around 350whp, maybe a bit more, with a 56 trim Garrett GT2871R tucked away behind the engine. Let’s take a look at how the engine matches up with the compressor map. I made some very basic and incorrect assumptions that will get me into a ballpark estimation, such as the pressure ratio across the turbine being equal to the pressure ratio across the compressor. That will give a rough feel for where the boost threshold lies.

This is at 21psi, with a 7000rpm rev limit. Because I am looking to make this last a reasonably long time, I am choosing to keep the shaft speed around 90% of the maximum listed on the compressor chart. For the GT2871R, this is a whopping 120,000rpm! This allows for some special circumstances, like driving up mountains, to avoid overspeeding the turbo to hit the higher PR needed to get target boost in thinner air.

Anyway, onto the actual graph. As you can see, this turbo looks pretty well matched to the engine I want to build, although it is just a bit on the small side for peak power. The spool-up is based on the 0.64 A/R turbine housing flow curve that Garrett provides. Volvo uses a T3 flanged manifold, so I would get this turbo with the T3 based 0.63 A/R turbine housing, but that shouldn’t noticeably change spool.

That is just about enough airflow for about 400bhp without pushing the turbo too hard, or around 340whp. Being a FWD car, that seemed pretty reasonable figure. More would only really be usable at very illegal speeds, or on a pretty high speed track. The real nice thing about the GT2871R was that it should be making as much boost as I wanted by around 3000rpm, which is perfect for the highway, where the engine sits at 3000rpm as the car cruises at 75mph in 5th gear. Stepping up to a GT3071R or GT3076R will bring the boost up to 3500-3750rpm, which may be a bit too late for my tastes, despite the possibility of a bit more power and a cooler running engine from less exhaust restriction on a small turbine wheel.

I thought I had my turbo picked out, and had everything picked out to support it; ATP ultimate internal wastegate, the actuator, an adapter flange, the hose kit needed to get all the fluids to and away from it, the whole nine yards.

Fast forward a few months, and Garrett announces the GTX3582R, 3076R and 3071R. With a redesigned compressor wheel, they give about a 20% boost in max airflow from each turbo over the GT turbos they replace. Curiously enough, they switched from 12 split blades to 11 equal height. That will certainly affect how the compressor wheel performs. Plus they added “extended tips”, which basically just makes the compressor wheel bigger than its advertised exducer size.

Older “GT” compressor wheels look like this:

Newer GTX:

The basic sizes of the wheels remained about the same, and overall efficiency didn’t change noticeably. The general operating window got pushed to higher PR and more flow, including shifting the surge line up. By by pushing the compressor map to the right with the same turbine wheel, the compressor will be operating in a slightly less efficient spot during spool-up. I suspect this will push the boost threshold up in the RPM range a bit, as there will be more energy required from the turbine to compress the same amount of air to the same PR.

Despite previously ruling it out because of the spool time, the GTX3071R seemed like more viable alternative. It suddenly offered a much higher power potential without a significant impact on spool from before. Despite being “slow” compared to the 2871R, I reasoned that having boost by 3500-3750rpm could be doable for a DD. That still left me with about half of my total RPM range in boost, which is far from being a spiky peak hp dyno monster.

Not long after that, I found out about BorgWarner’s EFR line. There were a couple things that I really liked about what BW did with them. First, they made a really light turbine wheel, and kept the size up. This improves the turbine efficiency, and increases the amount of torque the exhaust gas should be exerting on the turbo shaft. This, along with the reduced rotating mass compared to the typical Inconel turbine wheel, should greatly improve transient response, and reduce backpressure a lot while keeping a configuration that still allows a respectable boost threshold.

In playing around with Matchbot, it seems that the EFR7064 will spool around 2750-3000rpm, and the 7670 will spool around 3250-3500rpm. As far as turbo performance goes, the 7064 stacks up pretty well against the GT2871R; similar boost threshold, potentially faster transient response, and can supply a few extra lb/min of airflow at the top end. The Garrett is better than the BW at lower pressure ratios. The most pressure I want to run on the GT2871R is about 21psi, from what we saw on the chart before. The improved performance of the 7064 at higher PR and higher flow means that I could run about 25psi and get a reasonable improvement in power without compromising the spool.

In the end though, I ended up settling on the EFR 7670. Here are the operating points found through the matchbot program, targeting a peak boost of 30psi, the points are at 2750, 3000, 3250, 3500, 6000 and 8000rpm. As you can see if you can squint hard (or right click and open the image to see the original size), it can make 30psi by 3500rpm and hold it to 8000rpm without overspinning the turbo:

I decided that having full boost by 3500rpm, going through the peak efficiency islands of the compressor wheel, and a potential for 500+whp was a good compromise, despite being more power than I should really be trying to push out of the block, and even more than I should be trying to put down to the front wheels of a street car. Logic be damned, I’m gonna do what I want! Plus, the EFR series has the distinct advantage of having a built-in recirculating BOV, and a high-flow IWG with an actuator that comes with the turbo. Those two things save enough money to make the higher cost of the EFR worthwhile.

So, one step of the project out of the way! I know what turbo I’m going with now. It’s time to make the rest of the engine support my goals. I’ll save that for part 3, since this is already a tl;dr post.

Slowpoke News: C.McRae, WRC Germany and WRC New Zealand [ September 16th, 2008 ] By:Charles Smith

First off, Today was the one year anniversary of the legendary Colin McRae’s death. For those of you who have no idea, he died on September 15th, 2007 in a helicopter accident. He was the pilot and was accompanied by his son, his friend and his friend’s son. There are memorial stickers available, which I proudly display on my car.

Anyway, I am slow to report news, that however is not news. What is (old) news are the results from Rally Deutschland (aka Germany) and Rally New Zealand. Not unexpected, Sebastian Loeb continued his winning with both Germany and New Zealand rallies. Sordo, however, put up a great fight and followed Loeb in both events to 2nd place finishes. Mikko Hirvonen, not be left far behind in the points race, secured 3rd place in New Zealand and now trails in the overall standing by only 8 points. The pressure is still on Loeb for the remainder of the season. Third in Germany was snatched by Duval.

Somehow Loeb continues to win rallies in the WRC. Most everyone is being left in the dust by Loeb, who rarely makes a mistake. It really is amazing to watch Loeb throughout his stellar career and I’m eager to see what happens in Rally Spain this October. 

September 16th, 2008 | Leave a Comment

The Volvo Chronicles: New Parts! [ September 11th, 2008 ] By:Mark Ozimek

As Charles mentioned the other day, the rallycross was pretty tough on my suspension. There were a few dips in which my suspension bottomed out going over it, and I’m sure the OEM dampers were having a tough time dissipating all the heat that the roughness was generating. Somewhere in all the chaos, the dampers broke. The rear dampers are not damping suspension travel at all, one of the front struts is making an awesome grinding noise, and the other is also not damping.

Tough, but it’s a reality we all face in rally; off-road surfaces are hard on cars, and you need durable parts engineered to take the abuse if you want to keep stuff around for more than a few races. In my case, it’s not really a big deal. I was aware that the dampers were degrading, and I have suspected them to be the same parts that were on the car when it rolled out of the factory in Sweden. Both rear dampers were leaking oil, and I’m sure the fronts were close to being in similar condition.

So I ordered some replacement parts, and decided to go more for better road handling than off-road handling, seeing as it’s a Volvo that really belongs on the highway at speed, not pitching around slow hairpins in the wet grass. I’m sure I’m not the only one, but I get really excited when big packages arrive in the mail! Looks like my kitty also gets really excited about packages too…

Thanks for cutting open the box with your razor sharp claws! Curious cat to the rescue! Cool blue springs, 3 dead coils on the rears

(click for larger picture)

H&R springs, should stiffen up the car a bit around turns and over bumps. There are also some Koni Sport dampers still in the mail that will hopefully be here tomorrow. I’m really looking forward to those, since the damping rate is adjustable, I can play around with it to see what firmness level gives the best handling. With 205-55-16r tires on the car, I’m suspecting I can get away with going pretty stiff before it becomes unreasonable.

However, over rough surfaces, stiffer is not better, since it reduces the amount of time the tires are in contact with the road when the surface suddenly changes height. The stiffer dampers will slow down the speed of the wheel significantly, but on the flip side, the stiffer springs will push harder against that damper to make the tire move faster.

There are a lot of things to consider when getting springs and dampers. Without delving too much into the mathematics behind it, a car can be modeled as a mass+spring+damper system mathematicaly. Solve a few second order equations and you can calculate things like the oscillation period, transient response, and all sorts of other neat things to try to match a spring rate and damping rate to your particular vehicle and preferred handling.

Really, there are three scenarios that occur, overdamping, underdamping, or critically damped. The latter is really hard to achieve, but it’s not difficult to get close. Here’s a relatively complicated picture for those uninitiated with system dynamics, stare at it for a while and try to make sense of it all, I’ll do my best to explain each one.

Underdamping is when the spring rate is too high in comparison to the damping rate. Most cars are underdamped, as this provides a more comfortable ride, and good traction in most conditions, despite the poor response time However, when the car is too underdamped, it will become uncomfortable and uncontrollable, as the car will be bouncing for a long time after hitting a bump. Think of your Grandfather’s old old Caddilac here.

Overdamping is the opposite, the damping rate is too high in comparison to the spring rate. This is bad because it puts a lot more strain on the suspension mounting hardware, as the bumps are barely absorbed by the suspension and is translated into chassis movement instead. This means that a moderate bump can cause your tires to be airborne for a moment. Obviously not good unless you’re racing on a really really smooth surface.

Critical damping is when the movement stops in the shortest time possible, technically the ideal balance between the spring and damping rates.

So which one is best? It really depends on a lot of things. Smoother surfaces can use higher damping rates to trade a little bit of traction for better response, while rough surfaces can do the opposite. the amount of suspension travel you want, the geometry of the suspension, the weight balance of the car, and even the driver’s preference all matter towards making the optimal setup for performance, or in some people’s case, comfort.

Personally, I am based towards critical damping, but only from a theoretical standpoint. More experience with suspension setup may change my opinion. Until then, I’ll just have to play with what I’ve got and make the most of it.

September 11th, 2008 | Leave a Comment

More Rally Blogs [ September 11th, 2008 ] By:Charles Smith

Since Mark and I started this site we have found more and more rally blogs popping up all over the place. I take it as a very good sign for Rally(and maybe a little as competition). More blogs means more people interested and a much more transparent sport (one of the goals of TwoGuysRally). Transparency is something I think will make the sport more competitive and way more popular. It is hard enough to realize what is going on to a road car as a layman let alone a rally car. I think blogs fill that gap between racer/crewman and spectator while giving a more personal and less marketed glimpse into rally.

With mature blogs like the Marciniaks’ Rallynotes there also exist the younger counterparts such as the newly arrived more personal blog by Alex Kihurani focused on his upcoming stint in Europe. If you dont know who Alex Kihurani is you can either check out his main site, or I could tell you he is the co-driver for Dave Mirra. The blogs range from the daily updated sites that put out information on anything and everything rally (we try) to sparsly updated sites related mainly to its team’s performance. A great example of the sparsely updated, yet still very telling and interesting, is Alba Rallysport’s blog. I just stumbled onto it but it has been around for a long time and its link was staring me in the face over at DirtyImpreza.

Either way with every blog I find, that is just one more thing to make me busier during the day (oh how i rely on Google Reader…) but it also makes me that much more hopeful for Rally’s future. I’m curious, what blogs/sites do you read for Rally related articles?

September 11th, 2008 | Leave a Comment

Post Rallycross Damage [ September 10th, 2008 ] By:Charles Smith

Woops. Turns out there was some damage from the rallycross. No not on my WRX, Subarus are built for it, but on Mark’s Volvo. Turns out the rallycross ruined his shocks. His ride has become quite a bit rougher than he remembers. He couldn’t tell after the rallycross because he was used to being rattled all day so the smooth highway home felt just fine.

Either way, with any damage to a car (especially one as high mileage as Mark’s) there is a silver lining. Sure you may have to spend money, but it can also be a great excuse to do what you’ve wanted for a long time. In this case he gets to replace his suspension with something he’s been eyeing for a while.

So I’d just like to leave you with the thought that there sometimes are good things that come out of damaging your car (other than the “ive learned how/why it breaks”). Do you have any stories from similar situations?

September 10th, 2008 | 2 Comments

FLR Rallycross 9/6/08 [ September 9th, 2008 ] By:Charles Smith

Mark and I finally got to go to a rallycross this weekend(oh so many have been cancelled before). We brought our good friend Dan, who has written a guest post for us before which you should check out, to help “crew” for us. Mostly he was there to “look good” and man some cameras and talk smack about us while filming our runs. Thanks Dan…

As for how we did? We did okay considering it was our first. It was a good learning experience and there are some upsides from it. I found out I can be fast sometimes. I set a time 3.6 seconds slower than the fastest run of the day. So I would have benefitted from an Autocross style scoring where fastest time counts rather than the total time. I also hit quite a few cones: 5. I tied for most cones hit during the day. Each cone hit resulted in 6 seconds of penalty time so those cones were really hurting me. The only reason I hit a couple of them is because I was pushing too hard and spun 3 times during the day (even more time lost not counting penalty time).This is Rally though and I have to calm down a bit to win. Although, I ended up with 1st in class (only one in class) and 7th overall.
Mark did really well for driving a Volvo that couldn’t put its power to the ground. He was, you guessed it, first in class but 8th overall. I nudged him out even with my 30 seconds in penalty time. We did find out that he is far less aggressive of a driver when compared to me. He hit 0 cones the whole day. He was one of two drivers to not hit cones the entire day.

Here are some pics from the day to get you started:
flr_rallycross_9608 018flr_rallycross_9608 016flr_rallycross_9608 060
 
Anyway, I have started to upload photos to our new Flickr Account. I still have more to get from Dan, and there is plenty of video kickin around on two tapes and some point and shoot cameras. I don’t really like uploading raw video, but I think I’ll upload the incar stuff all as separate videos for you guys. Where? To our YouTube account duhhhhhhh.

September 9th, 2008 | Leave a Comment

All Ready To Go [ September 5th, 2008 ] By:Charles Smith

Mark and I spent the better part of the late afternoon prepping our cars for the rallycross tomorrow. The prep consisted of checking fluids, changing our oil (both of us needed it), checking air filters and cleaning the car out.

Tire pressures will be checked in the morning and filled/deflated to the correct pressure. That is one of the most important things you can do to prep for a rallycross and im leaving it for the morning of. I should really take my own advice, but there are only so many hours in the day. 

But now it is time for the rest part. 

September 5th, 2008 | 3 Comments

Training Tip: Approaching Raceday [ September 5th, 2008 ] By:Charles Smith

Motor sports are a lot like most sports in that they require training to be good at. One part of race training is conditioning your body. Exercise like weightlifting, running, biking and swimming are great ways to get in shape for raceday. However, training like mad in the days preceeding a race can have its downside. One of which is DOMS: Delayed Onset Muscle Soreness. 

Being sore is a good sign in the day or two after weightlifting or a new workout. It means you were tearing your muscle fibers (small tears, dont worry), and your body will respond by growing more (psst…you’re getting stronger). But those sore muscles wont react the same way your ‘fresh’ muscles would. 

In order to be well rested and relaxed for raceday (or weekend) you should start tapering your exercise down during the week before the race. The beginning of the week may start out just like normal, but you should be stepping the intensity of your workouts down daily. So by the day before the race your exercise is light. Light enough just to keep the blood flowing to your muscles nicely (this actually helps recover you). Not much tearing should be happening then.

Why taper for motor sports? You should taper so that when it comes down to the races your body will do what you want it to. Tired and sore triceps will make turning laborsome and this will fatigue you faster. Fatigue is what your workouts are, hopefully, aimed at combatting. Because it is one of the largest reasons for slower than normal performances and more notably crashes.

Much of race engineering is aimed at reducing the annoyances for the driver(s). One of the annoyances you can easily eliminate from raceday are sore muscles. So please, for your time’s sake, taper your workouts. If you aren’t exercising, also for your time’s sake, you should start.

September 5th, 2008 | 1 Comment

Mistakes Not To Make #2 [ September 3rd, 2008 ] By:Charles Smith

Mistakes in racing range from forgetting to secure a piece of paper in the cockpit which turns into an annoyance, to turning the wrong direction with the end result ending up in a tree. Consequences vary but some can be quite serious. One of which can end your race day is forgetting to properly inflate your tires. While this may seem like a no brainer to you, many people, who are not quite as vigilant as you, neglect their tires.

Tire pressure affects the only things that should be touching the ground on your car: the tires. Low pressure, while it may have increased traction it wears faster. High pressure might rob you of the traction you need and causes faster wear because there is a smaller contact patch. But there is a lot more that can go wrong:

  • Debeading - Tire debeadings are a pretty bad event for your wheel. The tire’s bead becomes disconnected from the wheel and all the pressure is lost in one violent event. The tire then tends to get shredded up by the surface (especially at higher speeds) and comes off of the wheel. Steel/aluminum wheels don’t have so much traction on surfaces other than rails meant for them. Try to avoid this.
  • Money Spent - As a privateer, spending money is on my mind when it comes to racing. Tires are expensive. But there are ways to make them last multiple events (especially in Rally), but improper inflation makes them wear way too fast for that.
  • Crashes - While not separate from the money issue (cars cost even more than tires), expecting more traction than your over-inflated tires can offer will result in fighting the car. Fighting the car will fatigue you fast and increase your chances of making a silly mistake like understeering into a guardrail (or spectator! ONOES!)

So take some time to think about your tire pressures. If you know what you’re doing you might even run slightly lower or higher pressures than “ideal” side-to-side or front-to-back. If its a short enough race you might drop the pressure a tad to gain some traction but still last the race in tire wear. So dont forget to think about your tire pressures and the oh so important tire they’re related to. This even matters on your road car!

September 3rd, 2008 | Leave a Comment

Do You Enjoy Hairpins? [ September 3rd, 2008 ] By:Charles Smith

I think hairpins, when not the only thing on the track(ie not autocross in so many places), are one of the neatest corners to watch. They are also some of the hardest to do really well (handbrake turn much?). Here’s a video of mostly hairpins taken by WRC drivers:

Link for the RSS peeps. Once again, I love YouTube.

Do you enjoy hairpins? Driving them? Watching them? ¿Making them?

September 3rd, 2008 | Leave a Comment

Together Again - Awwwww [ September 1st, 2008 ] By:Charles Smith

So Mark and I spent the summer in different states. We finally made it back into the same area this weekend. Why is this such good news? Means interesting TwoGuysRally stuff will start happening.

In fact there is a rallycross this weekend that we will be attending. If you live in/around the NY Finger Lakes region you should come out and play in the dirt. We’ll be bringing a video camera and a few picture cameras. I know for sure that I will be competing in my WRX and we’ll see about Mark. Small chance it could get rained out (would be a mud fest with rain).

Also we have a few videos we’ve been working on that will come out soon. So you should subscribe to our RSS and YouTube channel. So expect good things from us at TwoGuysRally.

September 1st, 2008 | Leave a Comment

Powered by WordPress | Blue Weed by Blog Oh! Blog | Entries (RSS) and Comments (RSS). | Automobile Blogs - Blog Top Sites