Big Red Suburban
02-08-2005, 13:57
Anyone with kennedys TD Max chip will attest to being able to make boost fairly easily :D I can see 13 to 14 psi when I'm into the thottle accelerating or maintaining speed up a big hill. Around home this is great, why you ask? Because I live in Nebraska and hills aren't very tall. This corresponds to very short periods of time when I am above 10 psi boost (I'm not intercooled btw).
My question is related to a trip I'm making to Colorado to go skiing. I can see myself driving up the mountain trying to maintain interstate speed with the boost gauge on 13 psi the whole way. Obviously, this is bad to sustain boost over 10 psi non intercooled. So you ask, why don't I just lift off the go pedal? Well, how slow will I have to go to keep boost under 10? Can I just install a homemade boost controller (like the one recently posted to turn the boost DOWN) to dial the max boost back to limit it at 10 psi for times like this?
Logically thinking (I'm probably wrong) shouldn't I be able to maintain say 65 mph up a steep grade longer at 10psi rather than 13psi if at the same throttle position (since EGT will rise faster at 13psi)?
My question is related to a trip I'm making to Colorado to go skiing. I can see myself driving up the mountain trying to maintain interstate speed with the boost gauge on 13 psi the whole way. Obviously, this is bad to sustain boost over 10 psi non intercooled. So you ask, why don't I just lift off the go pedal? Well, how slow will I have to go to keep boost under 10? Can I just install a homemade boost controller (like the one recently posted to turn the boost DOWN) to dial the max boost back to limit it at 10 psi for times like this?
Logically thinking (I'm probably wrong) shouldn't I be able to maintain say 65 mph up a steep grade longer at 10psi rather than 13psi if at the same throttle position (since EGT will rise faster at 13psi)?