PRICES
$193 CD that you mentioned
.81 @ exchange rate
$156.33 = USD
^ that seems kind of high.
I know eBay use to sell them for less (like $100 USD)
I just looked them up now & found a kit for $140 USD...with shipping it comes to $150 USD, so I guess that is about right. I cant find the other sellers on eBay anymore
http://cgi.ebay.com/ebaymotors/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&category=33742&item=7968840497&rd=1
Prices of rebuild kits have risen
I also know that East Coast Turbo sells kits as well. I think that their prices may be cheaper for kits. They may ask you if you want the minor or major rebuild kit.
WHAT I CAN CONTRIBUTE
Rebuilding a CT-26 is easy stuff (if marked before disassembly). I can put one together in less than 15 minutes minus the torquing of the compressor nut. It is not really all that complex in there at all. When you take them apart you need to mark them so that they stay balanced of course, so mark them as the link that Loki provided states. Also when you inspect your turbo, take a look at the exhaust housing. The ex housings do usually crack on these CT-26 units. The cracks occur on the waste gate & in the inside of the of the exhaust port of the snail. I am told that if you need a good housing, it will cost you $250 USD from a turbo rebuilder. You can inspect the shaft by putting a straight edge to it & seeing if there are low spots in its length. You can also mic’ it at different points checking for consistency. I am told by East Coast Turbo that the oil clearances between the parts are ideally at .0015” (which happens to be the ideal clearance for the crank & their bearings as well).
MY EXPERIENCE WITH REBUILDERS (NOT ALL ARE LIKE THIS)
In my case this one shop quoted me $250 to rebuild my turbo. I knew my exhaust housing was cracked so I bought another turbo from eBay just so I could get the housing. Well I took both my turbos in complete form to get one good one made. When they got my turbos, they called me up & told me that it would cost $750 now to make one good one out of the two I gave them. When they disassembled them, they did not mark the compressor wheel, the shaft, or the compressor nut in relationship to one another. Their $750 figure to just build one was not doable for me. I was not interested in upgrading, I was not buying a housing from them, their figure was just to rebuild one turbo. I went & got my parts back all apart in one box (it is not a good idea to have heavy exhaust housings in a box with compressor wheel/s I might add). I later noticed that a compressor wheel is missing from the pile. So I had to learn how these are assembled to make sure I was not missing any other parts as well. Seems that I have to do everything if I want things done right!
IF THE TURBO WAS DISASSEMBLED WITHOUT MARKING THE WHEEL, SHAFT OR NUT IN RELATION TO ONE ANOTHER
If done without marking as this heading describes, you will have to have the rotating assembly rebalanced.
There are different ways to balance the assembly. One is to have it all balanced as a whole unit. Another way is to have the compressor wheel & shaft balanced separately then rebalanced together.
How to set it up for balancing: I am told that you are supposed to pre assemble the turbo; torque the nut; mark the shaft, nut, & wheel; then disassemble the turbo, reassemble the shaft, wheel, & nut; and then have it rebalanced. You would do it this way because you want the shaft, wheel, and nut to be assembled & rebalanced exactly in the same positioning to one another as they would be in the turbo.
Torquing the compressor nut: I contacted this one rebuild kit seller on eBay and asked him how to torque the compressor nut if it was never marked. He replied as follows:
“I do not have a instructional manual for ct-26,i can answer your
question. The compressor nut is 18.inch pounds, plus 30 degrees use
red loctite,thanks”
Btw, Some people who have made web pages don’t recommend you use Loctite at all.
MY QUESTIONS
Has anyone ever built a turbo that was all apart without being marked first? If so, what way did you have it rebalanced?
How & how much do you torque the compressor nut?
Would you do it with a torque wrench? Or do you tighten the nut based on the feel of how much friction tightening causes on the ability of the shaft to spin freely?
I am not so sure as this dilemma is something I have to deal with now thanks to the careless idiot that took my turbos apart without marking them. The same idiot that lost, damaged, or stole my compressor wheel