
Originally Posted by
Dougal
That's not the right way to look at it.
Restrictions in your exhaust cause only minor increases in EGT (in line with predictions made using the ideal gas laws), it's lack of boost or too much fuel that causes major EGT problems.
Your inital cause was too much fuel, now the question is "have these temps caused any other damage?"
Some turbos can only handle exhaust temps up to 750C, some can handle 900C and last I heard garrett had some built for 1050C. Since the TD5 turbo is a modern GT2052 it may be perfectly fine with temps that high.
But your pistons will be having a very hard time.
First thing to do, back off on the pedal to keep the EGT's down to semi-sane limits.
Second thing to do, check boost levels. A drop in boost will cause a massive increase in EGT.
Regarding turbo backpressure, the higher your exhaust temps get, the more efficiently your turbo runs and the less drive pressure it requires. My current setup runs 2:1 drive pressure to boost when the exhaust manifold and turbo are accelerating and cold (20psi boost, 40psi drive pressure).
As the EGT's increase, the drive pressure drops. Above 600C EGT's I have more boost than drive pressure (provided I keep the revs down).
Hope that clears things up.
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