How to make this nose pulley smaller?
#1
Junior Member
Thread Starter
iTrader: (3)
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: South Bay, CA
Posts: 351
Total Cats: -2
How to make this nose pulley smaller?
I have a cone type nose pulley on my 1.6 M45 and am trying to upgrade it. I also have a machine shop that will make a pulley from scratch at a reasonable price, just trying to get the design down before I draw it up and pull the trigger.
From my own measurements, it doesn't look like you can make the pulley much smaller and still clear the nose of the charger without decreasing the wall thickness of the pulley. If you just decrease the thickness, what is the minimum recommended before it's too thin?
Also, I have been to the link below but looking for more detailed info.
http://www.lightweightmiata.com/jrsc/sc/
(Asked this on M.net but wanted to get other opinions too)
From my own measurements, it doesn't look like you can make the pulley much smaller and still clear the nose of the charger without decreasing the wall thickness of the pulley. If you just decrease the thickness, what is the minimum recommended before it's too thin?
Also, I have been to the link below but looking for more detailed info.
http://www.lightweightmiata.com/jrsc/sc/
(Asked this on M.net but wanted to get other opinions too)
#2
Junior Member
Thread Starter
iTrader: (3)
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: South Bay, CA
Posts: 351
Total Cats: -2
For reference here are a few pictures of the nose of my supercharger with the nose pulley removed. The pulley sits back on top of the nose.
From my measurements, the clearance from the ID of the pulley to the OD of the nose was ~ 2.5mm. I don't know if it's safe to go much closer than that. Only other alternative would be to thin the walls of the pulley. That would make it weaker but I have no idea how weak is too weak to work.
The Tony pulley must have been made on the same principle. Maybe he closed the gap by another 0.5-1mm and thinned the wall by another 2mm. That would give you the difference from 72.5mm for a stock 1.6 pulley to the 67.5mm Tony pulley.
From my measurements, the clearance from the ID of the pulley to the OD of the nose was ~ 2.5mm. I don't know if it's safe to go much closer than that. Only other alternative would be to thin the walls of the pulley. That would make it weaker but I have no idea how weak is too weak to work.
The Tony pulley must have been made on the same principle. Maybe he closed the gap by another 0.5-1mm and thinned the wall by another 2mm. That would give you the difference from 72.5mm for a stock 1.6 pulley to the 67.5mm Tony pulley.
#3
Junior Member
Thread Starter
iTrader: (3)
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: South Bay, CA
Posts: 351
Total Cats: -2
None of the machinists out there have any tips?
My thoughts would be to make the new pulley the same as the current but decrease the clearance to the nose a bit and make the pulley wall thinner. Will stick with steel since the wall is getting smaller.
My thoughts would be to make the new pulley the same as the current but decrease the clearance to the nose a bit and make the pulley wall thinner. Will stick with steel since the wall is getting smaller.
#5
Junior Member
Thread Starter
iTrader: (3)
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: South Bay, CA
Posts: 351
Total Cats: -2
Sorry, it is the older Sebring supercharger but it has the cone style nose pulley as shown in your picture. The TDR pulley's will not work for my supercharger. Their pulley's work with the next generation of Jackson Racing M45 kits which had a different pulley.
Only aftermarket nose pulley I am aware of is the Tony pulley but they aren't made anymore. Would be great to know how those were made. My other option is custom, which is what I'm trying to design.
Only aftermarket nose pulley I am aware of is the Tony pulley but they aren't made anymore. Would be great to know how those were made. My other option is custom, which is what I'm trying to design.
#6
Looks like you already machined the snout of the blower to fit a smaller pulley so that option is out. Bigger crank pulley would be the only option IMO. Even if you could fit smaller I bet you'd start to have belt slip issues. Also remember that blowers have a redline just like engines not sure how fast you're spinning yours. I used to over spin my m62 quite a bit but it was only for the last 500 rpms till redline. Honestly you're not going to get much power out of that tiny mp45 no matter which way you stack it. I would try to upgrade to an MP62 or a TVS1320. If you want to get away from eatons a lysolm 1.3 wouldnt be bad either.
#7
Junior Member
Thread Starter
iTrader: (3)
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: South Bay, CA
Posts: 351
Total Cats: -2
I haven't machined a nose pulley yet, just figuring out how best to go about doing so. I am running the stock 72.5mm nose pulley that came with the kit. Already have a 150mm crank overlay on the car. Makes about 8psi at redline as is. Currently have no significant belt slip.
My understanding is that for every 2.5mm I reduce in the nose pulley size, I would gain 1 psi of boost. These are rough numbers but I am using them as a rule of thumb.
As far as max RPM of the blower, I have already ran this past Gary @ TDR. Since my motor is intercooled, he thinks that a 65/150 mm combo is doable and should put me around 10-11psi at redline. Don't think I can get down that small due to the snout of my old-design blower but I think picking up a couple psi would be worth the effort. Especially because the cost isn't that high to make one and see what happens
I also have a few machine shop connections in my professional life so I may give them a call for advise on how to figure out the construction needed.
My understanding is that for every 2.5mm I reduce in the nose pulley size, I would gain 1 psi of boost. These are rough numbers but I am using them as a rule of thumb.
As far as max RPM of the blower, I have already ran this past Gary @ TDR. Since my motor is intercooled, he thinks that a 65/150 mm combo is doable and should put me around 10-11psi at redline. Don't think I can get down that small due to the snout of my old-design blower but I think picking up a couple psi would be worth the effort. Especially because the cost isn't that high to make one and see what happens
I also have a few machine shop connections in my professional life so I may give them a call for advise on how to figure out the construction needed.
#9
Junior Member
Thread Starter
iTrader: (3)
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: South Bay, CA
Posts: 351
Total Cats: -2
I need to get my pulley off the car and take some more detailed measurements. maybe even model it to really get a visual of what I'm dealing with.
Does the nose pulley get subjected to high lateral loads under boost? High stress area?
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
Frank_and_Beans
Supercharger Discussion
13
09-12-2016 08:17 PM