Masshole wrote:sorry to hijack the thread but i have a question. YOu can't just slap a supercharger on these engines and be done with it can you? I woudl think that would reak havoc on the internals and possibly cost you an engine if you push it. Can these engines handle a supercharger without beefing them up with stronger pistons and lower compressions heads and injectors etc. etc. ... ???
Actually you can just slap the sc on there without changing anything else as long as you leave everything else stock. As you start changinging things, you need to consider other parts of the overall system. For example, as you start changing airflow with intake/exhaust (which it is common knowledge ours is restrictive), you need to consider fuel system modifications as well. When you get into all that, it is good to consider using a good piggy-back computer to control A/F as well. Then this is all exaggerated when you decide to up the boost with a smaller pulley.
The need for building out the bottom end depends on just how much you throw at it. If you are careful, a good tuner and have at least 93 octane gas, my personal opinion is you can do as high as 7psi without rebuilding the bottom end. That assumes you've taken care of all the stuff I mentioned above. I say that from experience because I'm doing it. Anything higher than that and I think a modest decrease in compression, new pistons, rods and port/polish and port matching work is in order. Even with that, I think only somewhere around 9psi is really beneficial until we figure out how to cool the charge from the sc. Rebuilding the bottom end is a good safety net as you push foreward with new performance mods and take the risk of getting a little out of tune. As you get closer to the edge of destruction on the conquest for power, this safety net can be the difference between upgrading and a rebuild from catastrophic destruction.

- JoeB
- SolaraGuy Street Racer
- Posts: 1166
- Joined: Wed Apr 24, 2002 6:58 pm
- Location: Myersville, MD