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Old 05-27-2002, 08:03 PM
CAptynCrunch CAptynCrunch is offline
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Question on Natural Aspiration

Ok, my cousin has a 91 protege GT with a 1.8L DOHC 16 valve inline 4. It's currently producing about 170HP stock but he wants to get it up higher, possibly to the 225 range. He could take the easy way out and just turbo it but he'd rather not use forced induction.

So I'm looking for information on tuning an engine through natural aspiration. Among other things I suggested possibly boreing and stroking the engine. I'm not sure on any of the specifics of this particular engine such as it's current bore and stroke(although just from the time period and type of car I thinking it's probably pretty square) But i was thinking possibly boreing it to a 2.2L(again, not sure if it's even possible, but hey, let's just pretend for now ). Then, strokeing it back down to a 2.0L to increase the redline because he wants more top end power then lowend torque.

Also, I'm looking for all the different ways to up the engines compression to whatever it can take(while still being able to run on pump gas, i think it's about 11.0 or 11.5 to 1?).

Now what would be needed to do this job? both in parts and procedures, and what possible problems might there be?

For example if we shorten the stroke to increase redline would we need a new cam/valve system? possibly a custom machined one?

And if this all worked out, pushing up the compression, increasing displacement, and increasing redline. Just how much of a gain in HP do you think we could manage?

Also, whats a good estimate for the new redline if the current one is about 8000RPM?

Thanks in advance for any advice you guys might have
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Old 05-27-2002, 09:20 PM
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yeah, you could do taht, replace the parts with lighter titanium wones, differently times cams, if you wanna stay n/a, then get the insides polished, port the heads. There's a lotta stuff you can do, but putting on a turbo wont kill it with all those other parts anyway, so i figure you might as well
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Old 05-28-2002, 09:42 AM
CAptynCrunch CAptynCrunch is offline
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Yeah, but with the added cost of all these parts plus the bore, stroke, and porting it would make turboing something for the fairly distant future(unless he wins the loteory or something.)

Plus, the car already has 100,000 miles on it and it's his daily driver. So if we can get about 225, possibly like say 250 or maybe more N/A then that would be all we want because the car only weighs 2000lbs as is, once it's finished it'll probably be closer to about 1700lbs, And 225-250HP is plenty for a daily driver that weighs so little.

Plus we just like the challenge of tuning the engine as opposed to just turboing it
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Old 05-28-2002, 10:13 AM
SaabJohan SaabJohan is offline
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Why spend a lot of work and money on NA when you can get twice the power at the same price with a turbocharger.
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Old 05-28-2002, 11:21 AM
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yeah get a turbocharger and spend the same amount of money in gas as n/a....do n/a
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Old 05-28-2002, 12:02 PM
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...Or buy a lumpier cam and stiffer valve springs.
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Old 05-28-2002, 01:28 PM
CAptynCrunch CAptynCrunch is offline
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See thats also a concern, since it's a daily driver he doesn't want it to eat gas like say a turbo would.
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Old 05-28-2002, 02:08 PM
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Quote:
Originally posted by CAptynCrunch
See thats also a concern, since it's a daily driver he doesn't want it to eat gas like say a turbo would.
You can't have your cake and eat it too. In the world of engineering, it is full of compromise.
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Old 05-28-2002, 03:46 PM
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Re: Question on Natural Aspiration

Quote:
Originally posted by CAptynCrunch
Ok, my cousin has a 91 protege GT with a 1.8L DOHC 16 valve inline 4. It's currently producing about 170HP stock but he wants to get it up higher, possibly to the 225 range. He could take the easy way out and just turbo it but he'd rather not use forced induction.

I don't know where your cousin is getting his info, but according to the information I can find on the net the naturally aspirated "BP-DE" 1.8L DOHC 4 cylinder only makes 125hp (and redline is at 7000 RPM, not 8000 RPM). Even the turbocharged version in the 323 GT-X car only made 163hp, the larger turboe'd version found in the 323 GT-R made 185hp. So unless your cousin's car has an engine I can't find any information on, could you make sure the specs you gave are correct and if so what is the engine code?

Turbocharging is the only smart way to go with this engine, if your cousin is more concerned about speed than anything else he'd definitely see that. If he just wants something to sink a bunch of money into without great results, then have at it in NA form and watch the costs spiral.
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Old 05-29-2002, 02:59 AM
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The JDM version of the 1800 GT-X made 180hp, and the GT-R made about 240hp.


I have seen them avliable from importers in the US, and swaping one in really is the most efficant method of getting a whole lot more go into your Cousin's car.
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Old 05-29-2002, 07:49 AM
SaabJohan SaabJohan is offline
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Turboengines can have a quit good milage, what about a 500 hp engine which only uses 8l/100km or 29 miles/gallon during normal driving?

To get cheap speed from that 1,8 engine I whould have equipped it with a MHI TD04HL-18T turbocharger, these costs around $300 if you buy it in second hand. Then, modify the stock manifold or build a own manifold with steeltubes. A bypass valve is needed, but these are cheap, just go with a bosch stock valve, price around $30. Intercooler is good to have, and doesn't have to cost so much. Then the compression ratio must be lovered, the easy way is to go with a thicker head gasket, why not a copper one with o-rings. Copper gaskets with o-rings are what they use in top fuel dragracing cars, the only downside is that the block (and the head if wanted) must be machined. Tubes from the turbo to ic to intake is a must, 2" is probably the right size for this application. Then it's just to figure out how to get the extra fuel, this depends of what fuelsystem the car has and how much money one would spend.
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Old 06-02-2002, 06:39 PM
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So you wants the horsepower. First Overhaul the engine, give it a bore and stroke. Give it a good cam but not to hot of a cam. Easy way to increase compression is to get good pistons. Increasing compression is really a good thing to do because that is where alot of power is loss from todays engines. With your cam you need lifters and then if you gots money left go get a good intake W/ HEADERS. And dont worry were you redline at. Make it a daily driver w/ balls not a ricer w/ a turbo. Most people think all they can do is strap on a turbo which is not the case. Lot more work goes into supercharging cars than most ppl think
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Old 06-02-2002, 07:02 PM
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Quote:
Originally posted by The Dude
Make it a daily driver w/ balls not a ricer w/ a turbo. Most people think all they can do is strap on a turbo which is not the case. Lot more work goes into supercharging cars than most ppl think
To have any kind of balls that engine needs forced induction, it's not a good candidate for an NA buildup. And while its true that ignorant people don't know what it takes to build a solid, reliable turbo engine, fortunately in this case the factory efforts already have two different examples for him to follow based upon his specific engine.

Ps- Most ricers do stay NA, all they have is a set of plug wires and a farty exhaust.
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Old 06-03-2002, 11:13 AM
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Quote:
Originally posted by texan




Ps- Most ricers do stay NA, all they have is a set of plug wires and a farty exhaust.
OMG!! I was working in a shop a year or so ago and a customer came in w/ a Neon. He was bragging about how fast his car was. I was rotating his tires and replacing a valve cover gasket and notices he only put bright yellow tubing over all his stock wiring under the hood and spray painted the valve cover silver. Typical ricer...
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Old 06-03-2002, 11:24 AM
CAptynCrunch CAptynCrunch is offline
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Thanks a lot guys, you've been really helpful. I've shown my cousin your replys and he's starting to agree with your opinions and is currently looking at turbo's. Or possibly importing a gt-r engine. Not quite The 13b he orionally wanted to put in it, but i don't think transplanting a rotary engine into a protege would be the easiest or cheapest thing to do.

On a side note, does anyone have any input on the difficulties/practicality of converting the FWD GT to 4WD like the GT-X? Could it be done simply by installing the necesary parts(differentials, etc..) form a 4WD model?
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