Frenchy
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Chris
- Joined
- Mar 15, 2020
- Threads
- 164
- Messages
- 7,548
- Reaction score
- 10,757
- Location
- Elizabeth, Colorado
- Vehicle(s)
- 2012 Nissan Frontier, 1994 F150 XL, 2022 Ford Transit
- Occupation
- Field Service Technician
Honestly it would be better to stick with the stock turbo and do the other upgrades as you mentioned. Why? Simple. So you can keep your drivability when daily driving. Nothing wrong with that in a bit of power, but if you put the Power band in an area that you can't use then you are going to be very unhappy while driving the vehicle.Back on topic, I'm interested (for the future) on how I'd integrate a turbo 'upgrade' that I'd appreciate. At the moment I'm thinking a turbine swap in a stock housing would make sense, though I'd really, really want to add a free flowing downpipe and @Loweredon33s turbo inlet elbow. I haven't figured out the difference between the CVF downpipe or the SPD although whichever is quieter would be my pick to go with my 3 inch diameter not loud Magnaflow... and as long as I don't get CELs... so I'd like to figure out the size/configuration of the turbines for smoother power from down low. Of course I'd expect more up top but it doesn't need to be insane amounts. I want a very comfortable street driver that I can tow with. At this point I've got the fatter charge pipes and intercooler and could always update my tune to bring it all together.
Sponsored
