RE: were is he BOV located on a 1997 gst spyder
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RE: were is he BOV located on a 1997 gst spyder - 11/30/2005 12:26:46 AM
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anko_kun
Posts: 634
Joined: 11/14/2005 From: Beaumont ,TX Status: offline
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wtf is crushing a BOV????
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RE: were is he BOV located on a 1997 gst spyder - 11/30/2005 8:29:19 AM
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Patrick
Posts: 1192
Joined: 3/17/2005 Status: offline
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and as for venting to the atmosphere, i have seen an Awful lot of cars running an atmosphere-vented bov that ran much better than your average bucket...
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RE: were is he BOV located on a 1997 gst spyder - 11/30/2005 8:46:54 AM
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anko_kun
Posts: 634
Joined: 11/14/2005 From: Beaumont ,TX Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: anko_kun wtf is crushing a BOV???? can some 1 tell me
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RE: were is he BOV located on a 1997 gst spyder - 11/30/2005 10:34:30 AM
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EMonz57
 Posts: 11215
Joined: 5/13/2005 Status: online
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Patrick and as for venting to the atmosphere, i have seen an Awful lot of cars running an atmosphere-vented bov that ran much better than your average bucket... They can if they are tuned it can help out abit or if they lose the MAF. but without a tune the run horrible
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1993 Renn Red Supra Turbo 6spd
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RE: were is he BOV located on a 1997 gst spyder - 11/30/2005 11:59:17 AM
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anko_kun
Posts: 634
Joined: 11/14/2005 From: Beaumont ,TX Status: offline
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what is crushing in a BOV
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RE: were is he BOV located on a 1997 gst spyder - 11/30/2005 12:05:34 PM
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Patrick
Posts: 1192
Joined: 3/17/2005 Status: offline
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i dont doubt you by any stretch, but i have a question. my turbo car is an old dodge daytona, and very few of them came with BOVs, and they allowed the boost pressure to stack up, which greatly shortened the life of the turbo. the first mod that many guys do, is add a bov, which i will be doing once i get a new head gasket and such. so my question to you, how does it affect a system like mine, which comes with literally no BOV or bypass valve, when i put an atmospheric bov on the system?
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RE: were is he BOV located on a 1997 gst spyder - 11/30/2005 12:11:33 PM
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anko_kun
Posts: 634
Joined: 11/14/2005 From: Beaumont ,TX Status: offline
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i think in a set up like that it dose not matter what kind of BOV you put on just haveing one would help
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RE: were is he BOV located on a 1997 gst spyder - 11/30/2005 12:14:16 PM
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EMonz57
 Posts: 11215
Joined: 5/13/2005 Status: online
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What is a crushed BOV? Search for this topic now! Owners of highly boosted cars have discovered that the stock 1G BOV tends to begin to open too early. This causes a pressure leak in the intake system that limits boost. The valve tends to leak somewhat at lower boost levels, then opens fully when it's supposed to. This low-level leakage is the problem. The 1G BOV will usually hold pressures to about 22 psi, so this problem usually only appears on cars with upgraded turbochargers. [2G owners have this problem, times two - the stock 2G BOV can just hold stock boost levels, and tends to start leaking at around 15 psi. 2Gers don't crush their BOV because it's plastic and won't crush. Instead, 2Gers often replace their unit with a stock 1G BOV to eliminate the leakage problem. This works until they too reach the limits of the 1G BOV.] One DIY solution proposed to fix this problem is to crush the BOV. This means exactly what it says - stick the valve into a vise or clamp and squish it so it doesn't open as early. This is really a cheap & dirty method of increasing the spring force holding the BOV shut, and saves the operator from having to install an expensive aftermarket BOV. This techique can, however, restrict the amount of air that can pass through the BOV when it is wide open, making it a less efficient BOV, and therefore not as good as an aftermarket unit. All of this theory was explained by Todd Hayashi in his August 31/99 post on the subject. A follow-up summary post by Robert Mangus can be found here. Although the technique is simple, individuals should use caution in applying it since various BOVs and crushing techniques are different. The essential technique is to crush the BOV so that it begins to open when 18-20 inHg of vacuum is applied to the reference port. Pristine BOVs will begin to open much earlier than this. Crushing should be done a little at a time until the BOV responds properly. Over-crushing a BOV may result in poor performance. One opponent to this technique is Jim McKenna; he explains here how moving the BOV pressure reference solves the leakage problem. (Jim explains his original concept here.) Aaron Becker disagreed with the idea, while Warren Tsai supported it. As with most information available about this modification, this debate remains incomplete. Regardless, owners of stock turbochargers need not concern themselves, as the stock 1G BOV works just fine with stock turbos. GOOGLE search copy and paisted
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1993 Renn Red Supra Turbo 6spd
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