There is a consensus of international sources which suggest that sustained gas temperatures in excess of
720 ºC (~1330 ºF)
upstream of a diesel turbocharger will result in progressive and irreversible damage to components in contact with the gas. These may include piston crowns, exhaust valves/seats, manifold and, most commonly in the case of turbo-charged engines, the turbo-charger housing, exhaust turbine and waste gate.

A pre-turbo measurement is an 'absolute' measurement - that is, it is the actual temperature to which the turbine blade tips, the wastegate and the turbine housing are being subjected. The temperature drop across the exhaust gas turbine is difficult to quantify. It will vary with load, speed and will be different for every engine design. A post-turbo measurement requires assuming a 'worst case' temperature drop across the turbine and subtracting that from 720 ºC to arrive at a suitable limit for downstream EGT.
I have measured almost
200 ºC difference between turbo inlet and outlet temperatures on my Land Rover 2.5L 300Tdi under full load conditions, so I recommend
520 ºC (~970 ºF)
downstream as a safe limit for such installations. This will be quite safe in the vast majority of cases but it is also probably overly conservative in some cases, especially large capacity, relatively low-boost (i.e. <10 psig) standard engines.
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