Car on the road for 2 days and the turbo is ruined :(
#1
Junior Member
Thread Starter
iTrader: (4)
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: Fife, Scotland
Posts: 317
Total Cats: 10
Car on the road for 2 days and the turbo is ruined :(
Hey everyone,
Pretty gutted right now. I had the car out the second time since last November with my new built motor and GT3071R turbo. Mapping it has gone well but something happened today and I lose all boost pressure.
I had originally assumed I'd blown an intercooler pipe loose until I heard a horrible metallic noise from the turbo. So it seems the turbo is ruined and I'll need a new one?
I understand you can't rebuild a Garrett ball bearing unit. See what you think - I took a video.
Pretty gutted right now. I had the car out the second time since last November with my new built motor and GT3071R turbo. Mapping it has gone well but something happened today and I lose all boost pressure.
I had originally assumed I'd blown an intercooler pipe loose until I heard a horrible metallic noise from the turbo. So it seems the turbo is ruined and I'll need a new one?
I understand you can't rebuild a Garrett ball bearing unit. See what you think - I took a video.
#5
CHRA exchange is apparently done in a case-by-case kind of deal, from what I've read. The numbers that get thrown around are anywhere from 400 to 600+ bucks and you will most likely be sent a refurbished CHRA from Garrett, not a new one.
ERF T2 footprint turbos will bolt up to your FM manifold, but not your FM downpipe. You would need to fabricate your own, which will most likely be a supremely tight fit considering the length of the EFR units. I did the measurements when I bought a FM manifold and I was sure I was going to have to cut the rear shelf.
Good luck.
ERF T2 footprint turbos will bolt up to your FM manifold, but not your FM downpipe. You would need to fabricate your own, which will most likely be a supremely tight fit considering the length of the EFR units. I did the measurements when I bought a FM manifold and I was sure I was going to have to cut the rear shelf.
Good luck.
#8
Former Vendor
iTrader: (31)
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Sunnyvale, CA
Posts: 15,442
Total Cats: 2,100
- The turbo must have never been disassembled or altered in any way
- It must be a genuine Garrett CHRA
He says they've had people deliver CHRAs in plastic baggies to contain all the parts, and Garrett ships out a new one with no issues.
#9
Junior Member
Thread Starter
iTrader: (4)
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: Fife, Scotland
Posts: 317
Total Cats: 10
I asked my ATP rep once about the requirements, and he said it's this simple:
He says they've had people deliver CHRAs in plastic baggies to contain all the parts, and Garrett ships out a new one with no issues.
- The turbo must have never been disassembled or altered in any way
- It must be a genuine Garrett CHRA
He says they've had people deliver CHRAs in plastic baggies to contain all the parts, and Garrett ships out a new one with no issues.
#10
Former Vendor
iTrader: (31)
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Sunnyvale, CA
Posts: 15,442
Total Cats: 2,100
Best I can figure, $466 is basically what distributor cost on a new CHRA is. Even if you add retail cost of both housings to that number, you end up several hundred short of retail on a new turbo.
#11
Tour de Franzia
iTrader: (6)
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Republic of Dallas
Posts: 29,085
Total Cats: 375
That's really promising. The turbo has never been dicked around with so should be ok. I've sent off a load of emails to turbo companies here in the uk so I'll see what they come back with. I thought i'd be close to new turbo money, but if it really will be around $466 it'll make it a lot easier to swallow.
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post