ramblerman
Automotive
- Nov 2, 2005
- 13
first post.
I'm working on a hare-brained idea. Not that it wouldn't be easier to find the most suitable part already made by somebody else, but I like making things myself, and I've got the time.
I've been doing some work with Kevlar/vinyl ester resin to make underhood components for my project car. Now I have a hankering to supercharge it, and I don't want it to look like anybody else's. I'm working on a variable speed drive for a centrifical compressor (I started with the compressor side of a turbo unit) but now I want to get the compressor right. Most modern turbos work at pretty high rpm's to get their pressure, and using a large truck compressor seems like overkill, what with the heft of industrial size parts. Assuming I find the compressor wheel whose boost characteristics I like, why can't I make the housing out of carbon fiber? The heat issues of a turbo unit are all but non-existent, especially if I cool the bearing/gear housing.
any feedback?
I'm working on a hare-brained idea. Not that it wouldn't be easier to find the most suitable part already made by somebody else, but I like making things myself, and I've got the time.
I've been doing some work with Kevlar/vinyl ester resin to make underhood components for my project car. Now I have a hankering to supercharge it, and I don't want it to look like anybody else's. I'm working on a variable speed drive for a centrifical compressor (I started with the compressor side of a turbo unit) but now I want to get the compressor right. Most modern turbos work at pretty high rpm's to get their pressure, and using a large truck compressor seems like overkill, what with the heft of industrial size parts. Assuming I find the compressor wheel whose boost characteristics I like, why can't I make the housing out of carbon fiber? The heat issues of a turbo unit are all but non-existent, especially if I cool the bearing/gear housing.
any feedback?