So, I asked differently. I hit a 20-22 psi boost with Ign 18-19 deg. I don't want to go higger with that. WGDC is 80-90.
Am I air-limited? Would changing intakes/exhausts give me more power/torque? I do not want to upgrade my turbos.
Yes, I'm running E30-40.
I think you stress engine with 22 psi, turbos efficiency go down a lot, inlet temp much up, by that more risk of ping (knock). As I said before, my car isnt faster with 22 psi than 19 and dropping of over 5500 rpm to like 17-18. Yes, it can feel like its faster/stronger as you take out more torque also at midrange but when you go gear by gear I really dont think it will be faster.
I dont think you can express your Q "If you are air limited" as all is a combination of the airflow = better a suction side = more power, more free after turbo = more power but always something that will be the limit first. Fuel and timing = no problem. I prefer safe 18 degrees timing with E+gas blend, 19 with full E85, more will be near "MPC" = Max cylinder pressure that increase risk A LOT for headlift/studs/gasket, pings and also a big load on pistons and rods and... power will NOT increase over 19 so why aim for to high timing? I have blown one engine as the EWGs did stuck in close so boost was +2 bar = 30 Psi, it did cost KIA $35 k
You can try this with air in+out by put a restriction in filterboxes and a plug in exhaust end tips. I promise you notice quite a difference.
1. The psi that our turbos generate impact on pressure in the combustion chamber. Power = pre-ignition pressure + pressure generated during fuel burning.
And how easy it can pass both into the compressor and also out thru the turbo´s hotside, always the biggest restriction
2. When we lower resistance to flow/ improve delivering systems, we can burn more mixture, and generate more power with lower psi but by the cost of heat. At some point, the temperature can damage the engine/ exhaust system.
More efficiency with cooler air, higher flow speed = denser air takes more fuel = more power
3. We can increase the output power by advancing ignition with this same psi/ amount of fuel/air mixture.
Yes, with E content there is a slower burning of fuel, thats why you have to increase timing between 5-10 degrees depending of where it is from beginning and how sensitive to pings. Modern engines have a pretty high timing and let the ECU´s knock system take care of the environment like temp, fuel quality and so on, this to have a good fuel milage and low emissions. And when you test timing for max power you always needs to back of 1-3 degrees from there at higher rpm and even more at midrange as heavy torque stress engine mechanical more than higher revs.
4. More advanced ignition timing/ psi, more knock, so we need better fuel ( higher octane rating).
Yes, inlet temp also lower ping level. Full E85 is the thing, around 104-107 RON and runs with cooler exhaust = allowed more air before limit = more power
5. We can't increase psi above some point even when fuel lets us do so, because we damage the engine. (Max psi for us is 22-24?)
Yes, fuel isnt the limit for us or its easy to make it enough. Hardware like inlets, turbos, IC, exhaust is the things that can make engines VE (Volumetric efficiency) higher when you have reach other limits. VE increases with flow, lower temps, less backpressure
6. By improving
intakes/ exhaust we generate this same power with lower pressure but higher temperature (more burned fuel).
Cooler air, easier flow and suction, less backpressure
7. The real gain is with better
intakes/ exhaust and high psi- the coast is incresed temperature.
There is always a point when efficiency of the different parts has its limits. If you go higher boost, pressure drop over IC will increase = heavier for turbo = less turbo efficiency = more backpressure and also all other parts will affect
8.
You can also increase power with higher revs as power is from torque x rpm but for us... we shift early at 5800 rpm just as the turbo/flow/efficiency going so bad over that and power will decrease over 57-5900 rpm depending of hardware and tune. The only shifts that maybe can be a bit higher is 1 to second gear (6000) but also questionable as shifts take a bit longer at higher revs
Conclusions:
Every part works together and for a +600 hp Stinger you need a full rebuild with:
- Line/ar bored engine block/crank
- Better rods
- JE pistons or similar
- ARP head studs both at head and block bottom
- Cometic headgasket
- Camshafts
- Separate pipes exhaust manifold
- Bigger turbos
- Big DPs + free exhaust
- Bigger IC and all pipes
- Another ECU stand alone so its possible for tuners to do a full tune
Even with that there could be limits like in heads valve size, intake channels and so on.
I estimate a build like that to around $40-50 k