2023 August 3rd Week VAFEM News Recommendation - The pros and cons of turbocharging

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Turbocharging has become a major trend in the automotive world. It first appeared on mainstream cars and bakkies in the 1980s. In South Africa one of the first vehicles on which it was used was the Isuzu diesel one tonne bakkie.

Isuzu (or General Motors) was unsure of the reception this newfangled technology would receive in a traditionally sceptical customer base, so they preferred to call the low-boost turbocharger a “compensator”, supposedly intended to compensate for the lower barometric pressure of the Highveld.

Today, 40 years later, the situation has changed dramatically. Turbocharging is now almost universal on diesel engines and popular on petrol engines. According to my source (CAR magazine's Car Guide), by May 2023 only one of the 59 diesel engines offered on passenger and light commercial vehicles in South Africa was naturally aspirated (the 4.2l straight-six available in Toyota's 70 series Land Cruiser).

Of the 43 vehicle brands in our market, 18 did not offer diesel variants. Among these 18 brands, Honda and Suzuki are examples of companies marching to their own drummer (in South Africa, anyway), because most of their models are fitted with unadorned, naturally aspirated petrol engines.

The advantages of turbocharging are well known: the energy in the stream of fast-flowing exhaust gas is used to drive a compressor which crams more air into the combustion chambers. More oxygen molecules present in the combustion chambers allow more fuel to be burnt, resulting in increased power and torque.

The increase in power, when compared to a nearly identical naturally aspirated engine is upwards of 35%, and the increase in maximum torque is upwards of 70%. On the two Citroën C3 models, for example, with petrol engines of 1,199cc displacement, one turbocharged, the other naturally aspirated, the gain in power is 35% and the torque increase is 74%.

This makes it possible to use smaller, more frugal engines, which, on demand, can deliver the same output as a bigger engine of a previous generation. Such a bonanza was eagerly exploited by the automotive industry. It was particularly useful in South Africa with the “thinner” air of the Highveld.

But new technology always involves a trade-off. There are no gains without pains. In the case of turbochargers, the pains centred on the problems of heat. A turbocharger operates in a hostile environment. It is bathed in exhaust gas at about 1,000ºC, which means it has an even tougher life than the engine's exhaust valves which are cooled by intermittent contact with their seats in the cylinder head. Everything on a turbocharger gets searingly hot — the vanes of the turbine wheel, the shaft that links the turbine wheel to the compressor wheel, the bearings on this shaft, the oil to lubricate the bearings, even the compressed air delivered by the compressor wheel.

No doubt significant advances have been made in the refinement, efficiency and heat management of turbochargers over the past 40 years. The important question is whether they have also become more durable. A conversation with a turbo specialist revealed a disturbing picture in this regard: the lifespan of the latest generation of turbochargers is less than those of a few years ago. And yet, under ideal conditions a turbocharger should last for the life of the engine because there is no rubbing contact between its internal parts that can cause wear.

The explanation for the discrepancy between theory and practice is to be found in the term “ideal conditions”. How can owners of turbocharged vehicles ensure they provide conditions as close as possible to ideal for their turbos, what are the most common failure modes, what are the early warning signals of a turbo heading for failure?

These questions will be discussed in our next article. Among others, we'll consider the long-standing controversy about the need to keep a turbocharged engine idling for a minute or two before switching off after a fast run during which the turbo was working hard.


(https://www.timeslive.co.za)\


More about VAFEM:

VAFEM is devoted to providing high quality ball & roller bearings and related transmission parts for domestic and foreign customers in the Vehicle industry and Industries. Our products used in automotive and truck industry mainly include : wheel bearings, wheel bearing kits, wheel hub bearings, alternator bearings, tensioner bearings, clutch bearings, and gear box bearings etc. Our industrial bearings are mainly used in these fields such as Industrial Automation, Home Appliances, Reducers, Agricultural Machines, Precision Machine Spindles, and Transmission Systems etc. As a high-tech company specializing in bearings, we can not only provide stable and trustworthy quality products for OEM customers, but also provide non-standard bearings based on customers’ special requirements. At the same time, we can provide a series of complete product lines and have our own brand VAFEM, it stands for the abbreviation of value added for every movement, which has been recognized by more and more customers and end users.

 

2023 New Week VAFEM product Recommendation:

Truck gearbox/transmission bearings:

VAFEM specializes in the supply and support of automotive bearings across virtually every vehicle type and application area. Because of our unprecedented ability to deal with virtually all the worlds major quality bearing manufacturers we can competitively supply a vast range of automotive bearings. Below you will find details of typical products we can supply based on vehicle manufacturer brand. If your in a hurry or have an OEM requirement then please contact us at any time. We respond to ALL enquiries, whether you require 1 bearing or 100,000!

 

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2023-08-18

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