stevieturbo wrote:I heve retarded the timing and it becomes very lethargic as you would expect. It does nothing to promote spool, or power.
Certainly not on any engine I've ever tried anyway.
The less power it is making, the less ability it is going to have to spool any turbocharger. Theory, practice, obvious.
Power helps spool as power can only be generated by a lot of air flow, which means that there is a lot air flow available for spool.
If you retard the ignition and have an A:F that gives a high EGT - then is the turbo speed less at any given fixed RPM than that seen at max power at that speed?
Some graphs would be good to see.
Karel wrote:...
My experience is that too rich mixture kills spoolup. So try to be not too rich during spool up. Even stock EVO9 unit has an feature named "lean spool" to help.
So how does lean-spool work?
And why does a rich mixture kill boost?
Does it alter the EGT?
Karel wrote:As written, just more exhaust gasses at higher temperature can spoolup faster. Just let me ask: Do you need rotate turbocharger or make some power ? If you use it as an engine for a car, you schould try to achieve the maximum torq at every point at every boost and every throttle position. Some tuners are too lazy to tune partial throttle and are just tuning the max boost area. My idea is set the lowest boost as possible - tune it for the best result and climb higher and higher with the boost.
Karel it is good to tune at every RPM point and boost condition, as that provides good knowledge of the steady-state conditions at all RPMs... But it is not the same as transient response.
You probably need to start with the steady-state response as you are suggesting, but then build upon that to determine the best approach for transient response to get to the steady-state condition that you have proven is optimal.