To work best, a rear mount turbo would have completely different turbine designs than a front mount type, to allow for the slower, and less energetic exhaust flow. Simply bolting a normal front mount turbo to the end of your exhaust will have very poor efficiency. I'm assuming that the folks selling these kits have done their homework and are sizing the turbines as best they can, given that the majority of "off the shelf" components will be sub-optimal for their purpose. The other problem that I see with a rear mount system, is the long lag time that it will suffer, trying to pressurize the intake system volume. Front mount systems all have some degree of lag, and with a rear mount, you're adding 10+ feet of 2-3 inch piping volume into the equation. That's a lot of volume to pressurize, and I suspect that these systems suffer a lot of lag.... of course, your mileage may vary! Dave <> The Toyota V8 car guys love the rear mount Turbo[s] [ 'Rear Mount' being 'Under the Floor' - not after or even near the Convertor / Muffler ] check the www.lextreme.com site - there are a few great Installs documented with Photos there. The main reasons they go for this is Space - there isn't any under the hood unless you send the Exhaust forward - which takes dedicated headers, etc. The biggest problems with these under floor installs is oil draining out of the Turbo[s]: you need to 'valve' control restrict the oil entering the Turbo and to design in enough of a 'drop' for the oil return tube to allow the oil to get out of the housing - elsewise you've a cloud of smoke coming from oil backing up into the Turbo past the seals. Exhaust pipe I.D. AFTER the Turbo should be large - like 2.5 to 3" - no back pressure on the Turbine and use a big I.D. high flow Cat. Mufflers on Turbo engines are usually omitted since the Turbo quiets things down before the Cat. The Exhaust Header to Turbo flange pipe I.D. is kept smallish - like 1.75 to 2 inch to keep pressure up - and the run from Header Flange to Turbo Flange is dictated by your available space - could be next to nothing. Placing the Turbos almost directly on the Header Flange - is preferred as your best 'under floor' space is the area almost in front of / beneath the Firewall. >From the installs documented on Lextreme, they weren't too picky on Turbo Sizing - something off a small 4cyl. as the Toyota V8 is a 4.0 - making any MR2 Turbo 'fair game'. Throttle Response from Testimonials is very good - remember, these are street cars - not thinking in thousandth or even tenths of a second lag. Imagine your engine with 50 to 100 extra HP/ Torque - and the type of Power Delivery with a Turbo is 'different'. The 'normal' compression ratio hasn't been changed - pistons are cast - so off idle engine response is as it was - until the Turbos kick in around 2k RPM - then the 'Grin Factor' gets Stupid. The engine isn't 'winding up' pulling in fuel then generating power - the fuel is 'stuffed' in - the engine is being forced to make RPMs - the sound of the power generation is 'reversed' - it is 'weird and wonderful' - a totally different feel / experience to acceleration - it's "Dirty Bird" ;) There's some video on YouTube.com of these if you're energetic enough to Google yourself. -- Brien NEW YORK eagle registry #501 eagle kammback registry -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://www.amc-list.com/pipermail/amc-list/attachments/20071219/34cfd0b7/attachment.htm _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list