i've heard of mounting a manual boost controller in the glove compartment. will the excessivey long lines cause spike or any other bad things? and is there a hole to get into the glovebox? or do i need to make one?
thanks.
thanks.
OneJoeZee said:You should be ok. The hose routing on my 1J turbos is at least two to three times longer than the distance from a CT26 to the glovebox and I have no spiking issues.
Try it. If it's too long, you will know the first time you boost up. If it doesn't work, then just stick it back in the engine bay.
Idealsupra said:arent the hoses on the 1j controlled by vacuum switches?
the longer the hoses off of the wg/turbo pressure port the worse off you are...put it that way....
IMO its not worth it to put it in the glovebox...
OneJoeZee said:No. They're just like a CT26 except there are two. They are two independant turbos with their own individual wastegate. To get them to work with a boost controller, the front two compressors have to be tee'd together, to the boost controller, then tee'd out to the wastegates. So it's really twice the distance from the rear turbo to the front turbo.
There's no vacuum switches or anything.
The point is, if I am able to control boost that has to go a long distance like I described above and still suppress spiking, then he should be ok. But every car reacts a little differently to a boost controller... So the only way to know is to find out by trying it.
Idealsupra said:gotcha....im thinking of the 2j i guess since they arent true twins stock....
the point still remains that the shorter the lines the better for boost response...whether it be boost coming online, or spiking...the shorter the better. every single ebc you see out there says in the booklet "put solenoid as close to wg and pressure source as possible" for a reason
theKnifeArtist said:ah, thanks guys, yeah i think ill just put it in the engine bay, guess it's better just to 'set it and forget it'!