Any of the above conditions can result in excessive EGT if the vehicle is working hard, such as pulling a heavy load, running at sustained high speed, subjected to climbing a long grade, etc.
Above taken from Paul's post....what I was warning against.
Just to clarify what I was trying to put simply, yes Paul is correct.
More boost equals higher temperature in the compressed air from the turbo...the more air is compressed, the hotter it gets.
Hotter air gets thinner, or less dense.
This thinner air leads to the rich fuel issue which is the hotter egts.
This is where the bigger intercooler comes in...it cools that now hotter air causing it to become more dense, this results in the more appropriate combustion ratio which means lower combustion temperatures.
So yes, more air means cooler, but more boost without the intercooler does not equal more air.....only less dense air which means less oxygen for combustion.
That's why fitting a bigger more effective intercooler is not only worth it for a performance gain, it's essential for engine longetivety.....
Hope that clears up what I said
Cheers
Kev
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