greenMachine wrote:It looks like you have matched the ports to the gasket, and that is logical. But, as you mentioned, and as is clear from the 'before' photos, the gasket opening is larger than both the manifold and the turbo entry, with the turbo entry being the smallest of the three.
I think the way to handle the porting task is to forget about the manifold (unless there are dags to be cleaned up), and transfer the manifold exit opening to the turbo entry opening, and port that to smooth the gas flow transition from the manifold cross-section to that of the turbo port.

Enlarging the exit of the manifold, then constricting the exhaust gas down to the turbo port size will only make the gas do more as it makes two transitions rather than one. Whether that makes any material (sorry

) difference to turbo performance I seriously doubt, but as someone who doesn't want to do any more work than I have to, halving the porting task (to the turbo side in this instance) seems like a win

I have to say, for a first pass, you seem to have done a great job with the grinding

Any recommendations for a good carbide bit?!?

Thanks very much mate,
I did take them out to the gasket size with the same orientation on gasket when marking so it’s now a smooth transition from the manifold to the charger without steps, I am also unsure if there will be any benefits to this.
I have read things like boost being reached faster but I’m bot sure if it would be noticeable, what I hope is it just makes it a little better flowing, I had thoughts before starting along similar lines of the BP head, Will taking these out increase flow but reduce velocity and therefore actually make things worse?
Anyway I came to the conclusion that the difference will be minor in either direction, surely a step can’t be good and to not port in close to the turbine wheel.
My thought here is that I won’t be changing the neck of the bottle but the body will be larger if that makes sense….. and in my head step was bad.
As for the Carbide bit.
Well I had a very slim choice to pick from locally but needed that day so I got a P&N workshop series flame bit, at $75 it was more than I wanted to spend but I must say it did do a much better job than my cheap ones that are quite small.
If I had the BP4W here I’m going to use I would of matched up the ports to the turbo manifold with some dye, I’m not sure how it goes grinding a ceramic coating but I believe the face of the manifold remains bare so I’ll ask when it all comes back.
I did properly bolt the dump elbow to the turbo to make sure everything bolted up nicely before going to be coated and I took a very small amount of material away from where the bolt head sits, all the areas with nuts was fine but I will need to take a couple mm of 2 studs.
I have read a bit about doing away with turbo gaskets and using a smear of grease that burns off and forms a carbon seal, if anyone has thoughts on this or has done it I would be interested in hearing about it.
It would be for manifold to turbo and turbo to 5 bolt elbow.
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