C
CBX
Well-known member
Those of us who ocassionally ride the flat lands will relate to this since I used to drag race and have been clutching sleds for a long time (yes Im old) you can ALMOST interpolate a horspower by looking at the clutch weight, By that I mean that at sea level where everything is corrected to you know your Hp there . for example a dragon is supposed to make 150 hp (mabe) and the rule of thumb 33% loss at 10,000 feet You roughly have 110hp your seeing,,,, I know this because at sea level I may pull 74 gram arms at sealevel or 600 feet in the Up of michigan,, but at Vail pass only pull like 56-60 grams ,yes I know the helix and spring and gearing combo make alot of difference too,, but roughly speeking,, now I install my turbo on my dragon and clutch it at 10k and guess what?? Im pulling mabe 70-74s at 12psi so how much power do I have ???? Im betting not the 200-250- every one claims more like like 150-175 ,,the sled shure feels like it ,,,I know because I know what it feels like at 600 feet just a week earlier(I have a dragon121 at 600 ft) You can call around and see what weights every one is running at sea level,, I think a turbo is a great high altitude compensator!!LOL thats why I run 12 psi,, at that HP level the motor feels like Im used to in the flat lands 14-16 feels like one of my ported and piped mod sleds in the flats. I had a a Hoopper 3 cylinder cat that made 234Hp at midwest Dyno (cousin to Dyno tech) and I can honestly say that it takes 18Psi on my Dragon to come close to the tug on the bars that thing had , and Im not shure My 2871 garrett will last at those boost pressures I know an AERO wont even go there ,,not to mention my rings, any way this is just my seat of the pants Dyno Talkin cuz every one of those dynos Dyno
the 2871 should live there just fine at 18lbs. In fact there are a couple of 2871 variants that maps out into the 3.0+ range. You'll have to feed it very good fuel or lower ther compression ratio some as far as the motor goes. Different or reinforced pipe and gasket work. Compressor ratio comes out at around 2.8 for around 9k feet and arount 2.2 at sea level. There are educated guesses and not absolute. Need temp and barometric pressure for absolute numbers.
Its the upper end of the working range but not out of range, assuming there isn't an issue with surge. If surge is an issue, just put on an anti-surge compressor housing. I doubt that would be the case though, unless nitrous was involved.
But at that point, a 3071 or 2876 may be more desireable. If your actually going to run that kind of boost.
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