follow ft86club on our blog, twitter or facebook.
FT86CLUB
Ft86Club
Delicious Tuning
Register Garage Community Calendar Today's Posts Search

Go Back   Toyota GR86, 86, FR-S and Subaru BRZ Forum & Owners Community - FT86CLUB > Technical Topics > Engine, Exhaust, Transmission

Engine, Exhaust, Transmission Discuss the FR-S | 86 | BRZ engine, exhaust and drivetrain.


User Tag List

Reply
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Old 08-20-2012, 12:53 PM   #29
SkAsphalt
Ridge Racerrrrrrrrr
 
SkAsphalt's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2012
Drives: 2013 Scion FR-S, 2004 Toyota Coroll
Location: Regina, Sk
Posts: 3,516
Thanks: 5,786
Thanked 1,363 Times in 954 Posts
Mentioned: 37 Post(s)
Tagged: 1 Thread(s)
Garage
Where do you think you can achieve weight reduction in your current car? panel replacement would be expensive, and they are already quite light (unless the rear fenders were to be cut off and replaced with carbon?) the hood is so feather light...

Back seat delete, battery replacement, lose the spare and maybe cut out some sound deadening and you are probably at a 50lbs or more loss BUT the car would be noticeably louder** and could lose its DD status - however that would be the cheapest options. Changing rims could net a reduction of a few pounds per corner also but is an expensive en devour. I ask this notto shoot you down, but because I too am curious.


**disclaimer: I make this assumption based off previous claims that removing the spare tire and rear seats allows for the exhaust noise to permeate through the cabin much more easily. People were seeing internal DB ratings increase as much a 5-10DB with those deletes AND aftermarket exhausts (DB ratings were limited to 1-3 with just the exhausts)

Quote:
Originally Posted by Spaceywilly View Post
I think what they're doing with the STI BRZ is perfect. 250hp, 8500rpm, and lighter weight. In a few years if that car doesn't materialize I'll try to reach those numbers with my BRZ. I think the key to making this car fast is going to be weight reduction and not big power.
__________________
SkAsphalt is offline   Reply With Quote
The Following User Says Thank You to SkAsphalt For This Useful Post:
Spaceywilly (08-20-2012)
Old 08-20-2012, 01:47 PM   #30
dabocx
Senior Member
 
dabocx's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2012
Drives: Scion FRS
Location: United States
Posts: 1,267
Thanks: 564
Thanked 261 Times in 191 Posts
Mentioned: 9 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
I cant wait to see if ITBs will be possible, but ill most likely do that after cams/head work.

I wonder how far this car can go on a DDable 93 or e85 setup once its fully setup for N/A
dabocx is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-20-2012, 02:51 PM   #31
Turbowned
Senior Member
 
Turbowned's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2012
Drives: 2017 Subaru BRZ Perf Pack 6MT
Location: Colorado Springs
Posts: 5,048
Thanks: 1,949
Thanked 1,945 Times in 1,150 Posts
Mentioned: 27 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Garage
Seems like some tuners are able to flirt with the 180-190whp mark with just a full cat-less exhaust and minor intake mods, no tuning. I'm willing to bet that 200whp can be achieved with a full exhaust with hi-flow cats, full intake and ECU tune. Getting to 240-260whp would be a bit of a challenge, no doubt. I'm sure 10-15hp can be had from cams, and more peak power from raising the rev limiter as the engine seems to want to keep making power up top. There's more than one way to skin a cat, and I think it will be interesting to see what develops in the coming months! Maybe if 240whp can be had N/A on pump gas or with water/meth injection, it might be enough to keep me away from supercharging!
__________________

Current: 2005 Porsche 911 Carrera S 6MT
Previous: 2 BRZ's, 997 C2S, C5 RS6, C4 S6, B8 S4, GDB STi, S30 240Z, FC3S RX-7 TII, AW11/SW20 MR2, E30 318is/325i, etc.
Turbowned is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-20-2012, 04:12 PM   #32
SkAsphalt
Ridge Racerrrrrrrrr
 
SkAsphalt's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2012
Drives: 2013 Scion FR-S, 2004 Toyota Coroll
Location: Regina, Sk
Posts: 3,516
Thanks: 5,786
Thanked 1,363 Times in 954 Posts
Mentioned: 37 Post(s)
Tagged: 1 Thread(s)
Garage
According to my estimated numbers I will be between 180 (lowest hp gains) to 192 (highest hp) whp in my car with full exhaust, tune, pulley, intake and a tune. who knows if the pulley does anything really but I would still fall within those numbers. I am excited to find a dyno somewhere and figure it all out.

Problem is, if my exhaust makes the 11 whp max, the intake makes its 7 whp max and the tune makes the 14 whp max (all dyno shown maxes on the same make of dyno) it does not mean all 3 combined will net me 32 whp - so I will have to do all the work and find out!! I guess this is a thread I could come back to and post my results once everything is ready!


Quote:
Originally Posted by Turbowned View Post
Seems like some tuners are able to flirt with the 180-190whp mark with just a full cat-less exhaust and minor intake mods, no tuning. I'm willing to bet that 200whp can be achieved with a full exhaust with hi-flow cats, full intake and ECU tune. Getting to 240-260whp would be a bit of a challenge, no doubt. I'm sure 10-15hp can be had from cams, and more peak power from raising the rev limiter as the engine seems to want to keep making power up top. There's more than one way to skin a cat, and I think it will be interesting to see what develops in the coming months! Maybe if 240whp can be had N/A on pump gas or with water/meth injection, it might be enough to keep me away from supercharging!
__________________
SkAsphalt is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-20-2012, 04:23 PM   #33
sw20kosh
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2012
Drives: 2013 Black FR-S
Location: SF
Posts: 3,030
Thanks: 881
Thanked 2,014 Times in 990 Posts
Mentioned: 153 Post(s)
Tagged: 1 Thread(s)
Quote:
Originally Posted by SkAsphalt View Post
Where do you think you can achieve weight reduction in your current car? panel replacement would be expensive, and they are already quite light (unless the rear fenders were to be cut off and replaced with carbon?) the hood is so feather light...

Back seat delete, battery replacement, lose the spare and maybe cut out some sound deadening and you are probably at a 50lbs or more loss BUT the car would be noticeably louder** and could lose its DD status - however that would be the cheapest options. Changing rims could net a reduction of a few pounds per corner also but is an expensive en devour. I ask this notto shoot you down, but because I too am curious.


**disclaimer: I make this assumption based off previous claims that removing the spare tire and rear seats allows for the exhaust noise to permeate through the cabin much more easily. People were seeing internal DB ratings increase as much a 5-10DB with those deletes AND aftermarket exhausts (DB ratings were limited to 1-3 with just the exhausts)
There are 2 weight reduction threads already on here.
http://www.ft86club.com/forums/showthread.php?t=7881

Conservatively...
Battery: 30 -> 4 lbs
Spare + tools: 30 -> 0 lbs
Rear Seats: 20 -> 0 lbs
Track Pipe: 36 -> 5 lbs

Potential of 106 lbs. It is not bad.

Then I would go for the two front seats as they are HEAVY. I would install lighter bucket seats if I was just tracking the car. I don't know about DD'ing it. I think I would want the safety features of stockers.
sw20kosh is offline   Reply With Quote
The Following 3 Users Say Thank You to sw20kosh For This Useful Post:
Bonburner (08-21-2012), SkAsphalt (08-20-2012), Spaceywilly (08-20-2012)
Old 08-20-2012, 04:40 PM   #34
serialk11r
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2011
Drives: '06 AM V8V Coupe
Location: United States of America
Posts: 5,279
Thanks: 285
Thanked 1,074 Times in 759 Posts
Mentioned: 13 Post(s)
Tagged: 1 Thread(s)
Garage
Quote:
Originally Posted by WingsofWar View Post
Ill be shooting for 250whp for my n/a build. which is going to be horribly challenging to gain that extra 100whp while retaining good reliable performance. The engine needs to comfortably make 250whp rather than straining at 250whp, so moving the powerband up on the RPM scale might be necessary to achieve that.
Oh dear, that's going to be hard. Do cheat with E85 to get you that extra 10% :P Moving the power peak from 7k to 8k with longer duration cams and a different intake manifold (full exhaust and the rest of the jazz too) can net perhaps 8/7*165?lb-ft/150lb-ft * 200hp=251.4hp, at the crank, with very little room to play with after 8k, and a rather peaky powerband before that. From the exhaust numbers and stuff we're seeing, I think 170lb-ft shouldn't be too hard to hit. But now you are looking to find that last 10-15% "drivetrain loss", that's going to be tough on pump gas! (let's admit it, 9000rpm with a 1.5 rod stroke ratio isn't so good for the cylinder bore or bearings) E85 should get you there though, if you can direct inject all of it. When done right the charge cooling effect on pre-combustion pressures alone should be worth 3% more power, or something like that (I did some calculation a long time ago).

@MattR, I think Crower or someone did post a picture of the EJ rods next to the FA rods, and after I asked what the rod lengths were they did post it. I just remember it was 130+/-1 mm.


Quote:
Originally Posted by Bonburner View Post
how do you plan on getting 9k rpm AND 34 mpg?
Actually, this should be much easier than you think, given that we're willing to accept slight compromises in cam design. I believe one of the biggest reasons for the poor low end performance of big cams is that the big amount of overlap introduces large amounts of exhaust gas into the charge, completely ruining combustion efficiency. They say direct injection helps to increase the tolerance for internal EGR, but when you're idling and the vacuum is high, any overlap is going to mean a lot of exhaust sucked back in.

Larger cams however will lose volumetric efficiency at low rpm cruising conditions, which will decrease pumping losses and allow a cooler charge which further increases efficiency.

If you see some Toyota diagrams for VVT operation, you'll notice the range of cam movement allows the stock cam to be retarded to the point where it opens several degrees after TDC. So a performance cam that doesn't go too crazy on overlap can likely maintain near stock combustion quality characteristics at low loads. I mean this for both intake and exhaust. We lose a little bit of scavenging like this, but maintain driveability and increase fuel economy.

Last edited by serialk11r; 08-20-2012 at 04:51 PM.
serialk11r is offline   Reply With Quote
The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to serialk11r For This Useful Post:
Bonburner (08-21-2012), MattR (08-20-2012)
Old 08-20-2012, 04:54 PM   #35
WingsofWar
MODERATOR-SAMA
 
WingsofWar's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2009
Drives: Swagtron Scooter
Location: Seattle
Posts: 2,685
Thanks: 345
Thanked 1,561 Times in 524 Posts
Mentioned: 81 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quote:
Originally Posted by serialk11r View Post
Oh dear, that's going to be hard. Do cheat with E85 to get you that extra 10% :P Moving the power peak from 7k to 8k with longer duration cams and a different intake manifold (full exhaust and the rest of the jazz too) can net perhaps 8/7*165?lb-ft/150lb-ft * 200hp=251.4hp, at the crank, with very little room to play with after 8k, and a rather peaky powerband before that. From the exhaust numbers and stuff we're seeing, I think 170lb-ft shouldn't be too hard to hit. But now you are looking to find that last 10-15% "drivetrain loss", that's going to be tough on pump gas! (let's admit it, 9000rpm with a 1.5 rod stroke ratio isn't so good for the cylinder bore or bearings) E85 should get you there though, if you can direct inject all of it. When done right the charge cooling effect on pre-combustion pressures alone should be worth 3% more power, or something like that (I did some calculation a long time ago).

@MattR, I think Crower or someone did post a picture of the EJ rods next to the FA rods, and after I asked what the rod lengths were they did post it. I just remember it was 130+/-1 mm.
I know!!!!
what are your thoughts on Big bore Kits with non-stroke altering characteristics. We might get plenty of headroom if we bore it to a 2.1-2.2 or could just stroke the crank. And just keeping our redline limit around 7500. seeing as how the upper region of the RPM scale is already cut off from the factory.
__________________
WingsofWar is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-20-2012, 05:01 PM   #36
serialk11r
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2011
Drives: '06 AM V8V Coupe
Location: United States of America
Posts: 5,279
Thanks: 285
Thanked 1,074 Times in 759 Posts
Mentioned: 13 Post(s)
Tagged: 1 Thread(s)
Garage
Quote:
Originally Posted by WingsofWar View Post
I know!!!!
what are your thoughts on Big bore Kits with non-stroke altering characteristics. We might get plenty of headroom if we bore it to a 2.1-2.2 or could just stroke the crank. And just keeping our redline limit around 7500. seeing as how the upper region of the RPM scale is already cut off from the factory.
Isn't increasing bore pretty hard? You have to have a new liner and stuff right? Increasing stroke is probably not a good idea here since we're already so low on rod length.

HomemadeWRX/3MI Racing said he is working on this. I think he hasn't gotten a shortblock yet, but his thoughts were I believe new pistons with higher wrist pins, and longer rods, possibly eating up some deck clearance. We need 9-10mm of rod or so to get into "typical" high rev engine territory, which seems like it won't happen :/ I don't know how much rod length actually matters for durability and friction, but OEMs are clearly not willing to push to 8000rpm on less than 1.6 rod stroke ratio.
serialk11r is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-20-2012, 05:02 PM   #37
whitejdm
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2011
Drives: BRZ prem.
Location: Edmonton AB
Posts: 250
Thanks: 20
Thanked 35 Times in 29 Posts
Mentioned: 0 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Has anyone looked into the stock cam profiles? Does it look like they'll make power past the 8000 rpm range?
whitejdm is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-20-2012, 05:13 PM   #38
serialk11r
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2011
Drives: '06 AM V8V Coupe
Location: United States of America
Posts: 5,279
Thanks: 285
Thanked 1,074 Times in 759 Posts
Mentioned: 13 Post(s)
Tagged: 1 Thread(s)
Garage
Quote:
Originally Posted by whitejdm View Post
Has anyone looked into the stock cam profiles? Does it look like they'll make power past the 8000 rpm range?
Ah, dug this gem up: http://www.purcellperformance.com/Te...13%20FR-S).pdf

Those are Toyota's specs, which are not the 0.050" lift or whatever, but just compare with known specs for say 1NZs or something and you'll get the idea. I get the feeling that these are pretty conservative cams meant to maintain acceptable low end torque, because the duration is only a tiny bit higher than the 2GR-FSE (assuming their diagrams depicting cam duration are consistently drawn).

Now that I just saw that diagram again and remembered, the stock VVT system lets you open the intake valves 24 degrees ATDC! PLENTY of room for high duration, high overlap cams then
serialk11r is offline   Reply With Quote
The Following User Says Thank You to serialk11r For This Useful Post:
whitejdm (08-20-2012)
Old 08-20-2012, 05:33 PM   #39
whitejdm
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2011
Drives: BRZ prem.
Location: Edmonton AB
Posts: 250
Thanks: 20
Thanked 35 Times in 29 Posts
Mentioned: 0 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quote:
Originally Posted by serialk11r View Post
Ah, dug this gem up: http://www.purcellperformance.com/Te...13%20FR-S).pdf

Those are Toyota's specs, which are not the 0.050" lift or whatever, but just compare with known specs for say 1NZs or something and you'll get the idea. I get the feeling that these are pretty conservative cams meant to maintain acceptable low end torque, because the duration is only a tiny bit higher than the 2GR-FSE (assuming their diagrams depicting cam duration are consistently drawn).

Now that I just saw that diagram again and remembered, the stock VVT system lets you open the intake valves 24 degrees ATDC! PLENTY of room for high duration, high overlap cams then
Nice! Yup so should be easy to gain some reasonable top end pull while loosing almost nothing down low.
whitejdm is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-20-2012, 05:36 PM   #40
serialk11r
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2011
Drives: '06 AM V8V Coupe
Location: United States of America
Posts: 5,279
Thanks: 285
Thanked 1,074 Times in 759 Posts
Mentioned: 13 Post(s)
Tagged: 1 Thread(s)
Garage
Quote:
Originally Posted by whitejdm View Post
Nice! Yup so should be easy to gain some reasonable top end pull while loosing almost nothing down low.
Eh dunno about that, increasing high rpm power means the intake valves will need to close later. That'll lose power on the low end, but the upside is that your fuel economy will marginally improve if the VVT is programmed correctly
serialk11r is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-21-2012, 08:28 AM   #41
d1ck
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2012
Drives: Black 2013 FRS
Location: Newfoundland
Posts: 249
Thanks: 31
Thanked 83 Times in 54 Posts
Mentioned: 2 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quote:
Originally Posted by WingsofWar View Post
There is something wonderful and challenging about pushing a high performance N/A to its limits. Where as FI cars I found were just completely enjoyable and pretty easy to maintain boost during HPDE when you get use to your own setup. I could never get use to retaining powerband in a N/A during HPDE but that's what made it more fun.

Ill be shooting for 250whp for my n/a build. which is going to be horribly challenging to gain that extra 100whp while retaining good reliable performance. The engine needs to comfortably make 250whp rather than straining at 250whp, so moving the powerband up on the RPM scale might be necessary to achieve that.

I want to guess the limit of this particular engine in N/A form fully built for HPDE is 300whp-350whp. While peakers might achieve 350-400.
I highly doubt this engine will ever see those numbers N/A. I think 280-300 WHP will be the highest we will see on this engine unless we get people running 12,000 RPM.
d1ck is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-21-2012, 09:06 AM   #42
TSLRich
Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2012
Drives: FJ Cruiser
Location: NJ
Posts: 85
Thanks: 13
Thanked 13 Times in 9 Posts
Mentioned: 0 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quote:
Originally Posted by pcasso87 View Post
Maybe per HP gained but id rather have a 260 whp NA monster than a 340whp force induction monster. I like linear power delivery and throttle response which is great in a NA!
This the 2nd or 3rd time I've heard someone mention this.... 340 is not really a big turbo number... I think that will be achieved relatively easily with the small turbos that people are currently testing and those will provide a very linear power delivery.
TSLRich is offline   Reply With Quote
 
Reply

Tags
9000rpm, aspirated, high, naturally, revv


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Let's see your computer setup! Hanakuso Off-Topic Lounge [WARNING: NO POLITICS] 81 11-06-2022 11:43 AM
AutoX Parts Setup NYC BRZ Tracking / Autocross / HPDE / Drifting 38 08-17-2012 05:42 PM
Audio setup 315FR-S Electronics | Audio | NAV | Infotainment 20 05-17-2012 06:23 PM
2 car setup...feasible? mankarn86 CANADA 3 03-30-2012 02:00 AM


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 10:23 PM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
User Alert System provided by Advanced User Tagging v3.3.0 (Lite) - vBulletin Mods & Addons Copyright © 2024 DragonByte Technologies Ltd.

Garage vBulletin Plugins by Drive Thru Online, Inc.