Not intentionally sneaky I just couldn't find details of its expected power output so went to a couple that I could.PlatinumZealot wrote:mrluke wrote:http://i916.photobucket.com/albums/ad10 ... MG1900.jpgPlatinumZealot wrote: That is like what 3,000 horsepower? where did you get that turbo from?
This makes 600-700bhp on 2.5l street cars at up 2bar boost.
As does this:
http://i1235.photobucket.com/albums/ff4 ... 213408.jpg
Unless my sense of scale is wrong (likely) they dont look much different size to the one on the Merc PU and they are a fairly typical aftermarket turbo size.
That turbo is different from the one you showed first. How sneaky of you....
That second turbo is not maxed out. Smaller turbos can make 700 horsepower. Did you buy it from Fred Fintstone?
This is 750 whp...Garrett GTX3582R turbo at 20psi (this M3 engine is very similar to a F1 engine in that it is high revving). The GTX3582R can flow enough air to support that power (even if you adjust from E85 to petrol, it still can make 700hp).
http://www.speedhunters.com/wp-content/ ... 00x533.jpg
See more of the same here. http://www.speedhunters.com/2014/05/pic ... ula-drift/
The assertion was that the F1 turbos are unbelievably huge. Comparable to road or drift cars (as you linked) =/= unbelievably huge.
Again I was not saying that this power could not be achieved with a smaller turbo with a better tune more engine work etc etc. I was merely supplying a reference size for fairly common after market turbo sizing.
Believe it or not Formula Drift now features some of the most powerful race cars competing today. Even in the British championship some cars have in excess of 1,000bhp.