Warpspeed wrote:
".....So you size the turbo to suit the optimum flow at the desired torque peak."
dgallup wrote:
"Getting back to the original question about the shape of the torque curve:
Diesel torque is primarily a function of the quantity of fuel injected until you reach the point where you have consumed all the intake charge air. So the fuel injection system (mechanical or electronic) delivery curve can be tailored to give any desired shape up to the "smoke limit". "
Now the pieces fit, so it seems !
1. Choose a turbo that will give you the required air charge/mass at 2000/2100 rpm
2. Tailor your fuel delivery accordingly, keeping the latter below the smoke limit.
There is this ex-Cummins engineer who was employed at the factory for 30+years and has produced a cheap kit (US$ 200-300) for taking a 6BTA from 170 HP (in the older Dodge Rams) to 240 HP in just 2 hours of work ! I shall post his bearings on the Internet as soon as I am done with this post.
Instead of just "turning up the fuel delivery" on the BOSCH P7100 pump as most mechanics do, he substitutes the original "fuel-plate" in the pump with his own proprietary design (supplied in kit). Another part that is also supplied and replaces the OEM part is a hose-connector on the fuel-injection pump which connects it to the turbo´s compressed air delivery, and which is used for metering fuel over the whole range of boost.
No doubt, the 6BTA is capable of 240 HP, a rating that was down-sized for early Dodge Rams, in order to keep the powerplant and drive-train compatible with each other. So taking it up from 170 to 240 HP is basically just tweaking it - correctly !
In practice, it may require at least changing the compressor and repeated trial-and error runs, to increase the power from a 4-cylinder turbo-charged diesel rated at 150 HP/2600 rpm , to say, 200 HP/2600 rpm.
Finally, why do electronic-injection diesels ("common-rail") make from 30-40 % more power than their prior mechanical counterparts ? Also, the torque-curves of the former are largely flat over a wide rpm range, unlike the mechanical that have a varying torque curve with a peak somewhere in the range.