tuna55 wrote:92CelicaHalfTrac wrote:I still like these options because I can get them at any nearby wrecking yard. F2t vs KL, though. Is the V6 really lighter? I'd obviously have a bunch more turbo plumbing. Which is easier to control? You say they are both close to 350, which is closer? What breaks first on which? What kind of boost are we talking on each?tuna55 wrote: OK, let's do this: For each of these, what is required to get near or past the 350 HP level. Assuming I weld all exhaust stuff from scrap mandrels and scrounge for junk/used turbos. What is required of the short block? What is the easiest (on a challenge budget) engine management? How close to the edge of hard parts (pistons, rods, etc) are we at this level? What kind of availability are we talking about (The ecotec LSJ is a good starting point, but there is really no way to get into one on a challenge budget)? Mazda KL Ecotec Mazda F2T 4G63T 2.2 Dodge 2.4 DodgeSpeaking to the two that i'm most familiar with, the mazda motors... The F2T is the "easy button." 350whp might be rough to do, simply because of characteristics of the motor itself. (Not the greatest head flow, intake manifold runners too long, etc) However, over 300whp is cake, and it WILL come with over 400wtq. F2T is way faster than HP would suggest. Anyways, to answer your questions: F2T: Leave shortblock stock, it's fine. Couple different options for tuning. Megasquirt, HKS PFC Fcon if you can find one, RX7 460s + FMU setup, or 370-390cc injectors on stock ecu with a hacked VAF. You'd probably want at least a 60trim turbo if you're worried about 350whp. Otherwise... just put something big on it. It'll spool an HX35 without sweating, for example. The motor will not be stressed at this level with a good tune. I actually don't know of ONE F2T that has ever blown up due to too much power. They fail because of bad tuning or lack of maintenance. Availability is decent, there's quite a few Probe GTs in the junkyards. MAKE SURE YOU GRAB THE TRANS TO GO WITH IT. Mazda KL: Leave short block alone again. Big gains to be had porting the heads, though. You'll want to go Megasquirt for sure. 350whp is near the edge of the KL, but seriously... a 300-325whp KL is going to be nutso-fast. Availability is great, at least locally. I can go to either of my self-service yards and have my choice of at least 3-4 on any given day, for $150-$175, trans is another $50.
I would say the V6 is lighter for sure. It's all aluminum, i'm actually saving a bunch of weight in my escort stuffing in a KL in place of the 1.8 BP that was in there.
Yes, it will have more turbo plumbing, but i was also assuming the use of the stock cast iron manifold on the F2T.
It's hard to tell which is truly stressed more at 350whp, because 350whp is a weird spot for the F2T. The big difference is that at 350whp, the F2T will make an easy 100 more wtq. It also won't rev as high, the powerband will be completely and utterly violent.
I would say the F2T would be easier to tune, it's more "friendly."
The KL, the rods will go first. The F2T.... you'd probably lift the head off the block before anything actually went in it, assuming a good tune. The F2T is prone to failure due to detonation, it has Hyperpeutic pistons. Don't detonate, and it'll be fine.
The KL will make more power on same boost as F2T. The F2T will handle FAR more boost than the KL will, though. It's a crap shoot.
347whp, 459wtq @ 27psi on a T4 50trim: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2MdRsu5ZA6M
I would suggest a bigger turbo, but either way, you'll be pushing more pressure on the F2T. That said... i also know of some tricks that could bring that number down some, and give a more friendly curve. F2T + bigger turbo hits with all the sublety of getting rear-ended by a mack truck. They're BRUTAL motors.
Oh yeah, motor in that video is 100% stock and never opened. Original head studs, gasket, internals, cam, everything. It even had 234k kilometers on it at time of dyno.