I took the sled up Monday and it is a whole new machine. I am building boost now, 9 lbs with 50/50 110. The bog issue is still there when I dump off the throttle, jumping (hard snow) and even hillclimbing. Does a blow-off valve take care of this issue, since I don't have one? It seems to run well everywhere except when I dump (release) the throttle under boost.
Thanks for everyones help thus far; the sled is so much more fun to ride and my fuel mileage even improved now that I'm always on the pipe.
id put a bov in, they are good to have, especially with that boost, atleast in my opinion, but heres what i think happens in a "reaction",
now IDK about your going uphill bogs, but this is when you let off the throttle after drops or something, basically letting off the gas while boost still there....
you let off throttle, flaps in carbs close, you got 9 psi that has to go somewhere, your boost gauge and fuel pressure reg reads 9 psi continues to flow for that, engines not receiving much air.... and then the turbo starts to slow down quick because its got no exhaust keep the exhaust turbine spinning fast to make boost and the boost has to escape....., so in a nut shell, back pressure goes up moreless, you got boost probably escaping out of the turbo intake,
so that being short, no air in engine, getting fueled for 9 psi any ways?, open it up, its running real rich from all that fuel thrown in, then it spits it out and goes again,
so where a BOV comes in... is it essentially keeps the turbo spinning, you build boost, shut flaps, dump boost, turbo spins freely, you open throttle up, wastegate closes and you have boost almost instantly again, if your playing with the throttle like climbing in and around trees
now i could be wrong, idk how your SETUP is, but my guess on it all is what i have said, but a BOV never hurts, and you can only have gains from it