I now more cr = more power more efficiency for atmospheric engine.High CR is actually the way to go for high HP....especially with ethanol and forged components in the picture. Alot of 2JZ folks go 10:1 CR on their builds and it does well with spooling and low end grunt. No worries here with high CR honestly.
Yeah. Better response and better spooling. It's all about managing the heat, and DI's are great at that.High CR is actually the way to go for high HP....especially with ethanol and forged components in the picture. Alot of 2JZ folks go 10:1 CR on their builds and it does well with spooling and low end grunt. No worries here with high CR honestly.
Yeah, I was worried about the DI only aspect of the B58 as well. It would be nice to have a set of port injectors as well to avoid any carbon build up on the valves. Other than that, I agree DI is the way to go. Also, we can always go the M3 route and do water injection ;-).Ran 10.5:1 on my 2JZ, 27psi of boost on a 67. Made 707whp on SP's mustang dyno and it was a response monster. High comp is the way to go!
I for one will be the one building my B58 to 12:1 lol. The DI system in this car is stupid high pressure, so injection atomization is likely going to be great. Volume is the only thing that concerns me, with no supplemental port injection like on the 86. But the Bimmer boys seem to be handing that fine, so we'll get over that hurdle too.
Water meth injection with a JB4 controlling is the cheap and easy way to go. Plus logging capabilities are welcome.Yeah, I was worried about the DI only aspect of the B58 as well. It would be nice to have a set of port injectors as well to avoid any carbon build up on the valves. Other than that, I agree DI is the way to go. Also, we can always go the M3 route and do water injection ;-).
I'm more worried about the block. More specifically, the "spray on" cylinder liners. If you get a detonation event, bad enough to snap a ring land, then the bore liner is toast (and by extension the block). However, if there's enough meat between the water jackets and the bore, we might be able to machine the block for standard inserts. No doubt some enterprising young mind is already hard at work on this. We'll see.Ran 10.5:1 on my 2JZ, 27psi of boost on a 67. Made 707whp on SP's mustang dyno and it was a response monster. High comp is the way to go!
I for one will be the one building my B58 to 12:1 lol. The DI system in this car is stupid high pressure, so injection atomization is likely going to be great. Volume is the only thing that concerns me, with no supplemental port injection like on the 86. But the Bimmer boys seem to be handing that fine, so we'll get over that hurdle too.
Again I will point out the VR38DETT also is aluminum, also has no liners, also has plasma sprayed super thin bore coatings, and it is capable of absolutely stupid amounts of power.I'm more worried about the block. More specifically, the "spray on" cylinder liners. If you get a detonation event, bad enough to snap a ring land, then the bore liner is toast (and by extension the block). However, if there's enough meat between the water jackets and the bore, we might be able to machine the block for standard inserts. No doubt some enterprising young mind is already hard at work on this. We'll see.
If memory serves, the VR38DETT has one or two aftermarket cylinder sleeves available. Please correct me if I'm wrong.Again I will point out the VR38DETT also is aluminum, also has no liners, also has plasma sprayed super thin bore coatings, and it is capable of absolutely stupid amounts of power.
We need to know what will be the fuel cap on OEM HPFP, probably around 600whp with meth (on S55 you can get almost up to 750whp with race gas and meth). The easiest upgrade would be get a PI kit and let JB4 handle DI+PI injection. I am confident though down the line XDI will make a HPFP upgrade that adds a nice chunk of room above that.Ran 10.5:1 on my 2JZ, 27psi of boost on a 67. Made 707whp on SP's mustang dyno and it was a response monster. High comp is the way to go!
I for one will be the one building my B58 to 12:1 lol. The DI system in this car is stupid high pressure, so injection atomization is likely going to be great. Volume is the only thing that concerns me, with no supplemental port injection like on the 86. But the Bimmer boys seem to be handing that fine, so we'll get over that hurdle too.
Yes, Darton makes some. But I think that it will be a while before anyone feels the need to upgrade liners.If memory serves, the VR38DETT has one or two aftermarket cylinder sleeves available. Please correct me if I'm wrong.
The B58 Revision has a much higher HPFP pressure at 5000 psi. That is 2,100 more than the old B58 andWe need to know what will be the fuel cap on OEM HPFP, probably around 600whp with meth (on S55 you can get almost up to 750whp with race gas and meth). The easiest upgrade would be get a PI kit and let JB4 handle DI+PI injection. I am confident though down the line XDI will make a HPFP upgrade that adds a nice chunk of room above that.
Correct. A quick walkthrough over at GTRLife will show just how rarely liners and/or sleeves are utilized in a VR38 (if at all) with 1000hp+. It is one hell of a motor.Yes, Darton makes some. But I think that it will be a while before anyone feels the need to upgrade liners.
Bmw building B58 High comp 11:1 to S58 low comp 9.3:1 for more than 500whpRan 10.5:1 on my 2JZ, 27psi of boost on a 67. Made 707whp on SP's mustang dyno and it was a response monster. High comp is the way to go!
I for one will be the one building my B58 to 12:1 lol. The DI system in this car is stupid high pressure, so injection atomization is likely going to be great. Volume is the only thing that concerns me, with no supplemental port injection like on the 86. But the Bimmer boys seem to be handing that fine, so we'll get over that hurdle too.