[wow, this turned out to be really long and rambly]
STM: MT.net really, really don't like the B6! If I showed up there and said "I'm building a B6" I'd probably get banned right off the internet
(I have done a lot of reading over there, though!)
I'm staying with the B6 because as far as I can tell I could wind enough boost into a built B6 to make everything behind it a "consumable" if I really wanted to (and I don't) so the extra effort of going up to a BP would just be more expense only to hit the same limits, a BP will just do it earlier in the rev range. (I figure a stock B6 will be cheaper to buy because everyone wants a BP, and the internal parts are about the same price either way) .. the B6 head isn't great, but .. meh. Rebuilding my existing motor would be cheaper again, but I don't want to be completely sans-car while I do this either.
I *do* expect to need a 6-speed at some point in the car's future. Hopefully semi-distant... If money was no object, it'd definitely be a stroked BP attached to an RX g/box, and whatever diff didn't evaporate. (Or an LFX swap) Sadly, money
is an object...
Speed, from my understanding (limited to google searches, and I once read the first few chapter's of Corky Bell's "Maximum Boost"...
) You can put approximately 250ft/lbs of torque through a stock rod at stock redline. More RPM means less torque because the weight of the pistons swinging around on the end of the rods grows exponentially with RPM (or something along those lines). The actual amount of boost you need to hit that 250ft/lb number can vary, depending on what else isn't stock in the setup. For a completely stock car, I think you're correct with those boost numbers.
I think also the boost will be limited as CR rises. If you think of boost as a CR adder/multiplier, it kinda makes sense. (The following is not correct in reality, but I think correct in concept - it's how I'm visualising the situation at least)
Me wrote:The amount of power you make will be determined by how much of an explosion you can set off in the cylinder. More air and fuel means a bigger "explosion" (ie; boost), but also compressing a smaller mixture more will also yield a bigger "explosion"; so hypothetically:
If you're at 100kPa intake pressure (ie; WOT and N/A) with a 9:1 Compression Ratio, You'll make (invented number) 100ft/lb.
If you're at 133kPa intake pressure (ie; WOT and 5PSI) with a 9:1 Compression Ratio, You'll make (invented number) 133ft/lb. (33% more air/fuel to compress)
If you're at 100kPa intake pressure (ie; WOT and N/A) with a 12:1 Compression Ratio, You'll make (invented number) 133ft/lb. (air/fuel 33% more compressed)
I'm positive things don't scale like that, it's the vibe of the thing. Also; the event in a cylinder isn't an "explosion", it's just a really-really-fast,
controlled, burn.
"More boost and less CR" is preferrable to "less boost and more CR", Higher CR causes the mixture to heat more in the cylinder (uncontrolled, unmeasureable), where as boost gets cooled down via the intercooler and the addition of extra fuel. So we'd be limiting the amount of "unknown heating" from CR (I'm sure it's actually calucable by someone smarter than me) in favor of pumping in more air of a known tempreature. But lower CR means a lazier motor out of boost.
So on 98 there will definitely be a point where too much CR will limit the amount of boost I can run because it will start pre-ignigting (pinging, knocking, perforating blocks, whatever you want to call it, ie; an actual explosion, not a controlled burn) because the mixture is getting too compressed/hot and igniting itself instead of waiting for the spark plug to do it. Under that point I should get a slightly snappier motor off-boost, and get into boost a wee bit quicker - but the limit of CR and boost will depend on lots of things (piston shape, chamber shape, intake temps, etc)
Forged rods and 9.4:1 CR pistons on fleabay seem like a decent enough compromise. More than stock power while off boost, and more than enough to make me consider using less throttle while on boost. I'm curious as to roughly where the scale would tip from "more CR = more power out of boost" to "Too much CR limiting boost below what the stock rods could handle anyway" on 98. I don't want to go anywhere near the tipping point, I just want to know where it is so I can stay away from it!
I'm pretty sure Dann has proven going to e85 with high compression makes the whole point moot, you just wind in boost until you see god. I'm still set on going with the EFR6258 turbo when the time comes, so having oodles of boost on tap won't be an issue, it'll be a matter of keeping it turned down far enough to not destroy everything it's attached to on e85, and picking a nice safe level to have it on 98 to avoid detonation.
If the experiment goes well and nothing explodes, I'll eventually rebuild the "other motor" to use better quality items, and push it a little bit harder, adjusting the forumla to reflect what I learn from this build.