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New Super Cheep Chinese Turbo!

A project log for Turbo Lexus IS200 (on the cheap!)

Improving the performance of an IS200. Goal - Under £1000

roryRory 02/01/2018 at 12:150 Comments

So after the track day I knew that the Saab 9-3 turbo was too small for my engine. Although in normal driving the turbo added power at low RPM where you need it, on the track performance could have been better. That's why i started the whole project after all. Also in normal driving i was getting very rich AFRs probably due to the small turbine housing restricting the exhaust.

I had some spare pay pal cash and one lunchtime the temptation got the better of me and I ordered a very cheep brand new turbo off Ebay. This was totally at random without any research. Didn’t even think about the size. Just ordered it.

To be fair I did do a little bit of googling about the quality of these parts. There were a few reports of turbos blowing up but they must sell thousands of these. I reasoned that they were half decent.

So this turbo cost £120 delivered. I assumed it must be shipped direct from china for that price so sort of forgot about it. This was the week before Christmas.

I ordered a GT2871 Garrett copy. The manufacturer seems to be called 'maxpeedingrods'

To my surprise, a few days later the turbo arrived! it was a real turbo, the quality seemed really good. how can anyone make a turbo for £120?

It came with a well written instruction book which was actually very useful and a few gaskets and bits and pieces,

I suddenly realised that i could use the Christmas break to fit this while I was back at my parents place. This was the last trading day before Christmas and I needed a few parts due to differences to the old turbo:

The first step was to make the turbine outlet flange. I downloaded garret's datasheet for a GT2871 and draw up the flange in cad. I printed out the design and found the exhaust housing on the turbo is not quite the same as the original. A normal 'garret 5 bolt flange' as they are known will not fit these turbos. The gaskets will fit and seal but you need to trim off a corner of one of the bolt holes. I will put my flange design in the files section

Made from a piece of steel plate.

I chopped off the old flange from the down pipe and fitted the new on

The exhaust inlet is the same flange so that bolted straight on.

The compressor inlet and outlet bolted straight up after rotating the housings to the correct position. Coolant lines and oil feeds not shown here. The coolant lines were lashed up with some 1/4"bsp to 8mm copper compression fittings. A short length of copper linked to the coolant lines. These have now been replaced with the correct bits!

Apart from working in the snow and in the dark it wasn’t that difficult a job.

The first test drive was a bit disappointing. The turbo wouldn’t spool up until about 5KRPM. 'the turbo is much too big' I thought. Testing revealed that the wastegate on these turbos needs quite allot of preload to seal properly. Once that was sorted it was building boost from about 3.5KRPM. I am using the wastegate actuator supplied with the turbo. The instructions advised that the spring was set to .5BAR boost pressure.

Performance is now much better at high RPM. with .5 bar all the way to the red line. A slightly smaller turbo would be better if you’re doing this yourself but for £120 you cannot argue

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