pully size and boost?
I know this much. I know all about the supporting mods. On a turbo you buy it and set it for a psi boost level. What I am asking about is the pulley size I would need for the 18 psi goal. I would have all supporting mods I am going to build the engine from the bottom up out of a bare block. The horespower number I am not real sure I am just going to build what I got in my head and see if I am happy with the numbers.
put it this way, on a stock engine and stock pulley say it makes 7psi (im guessing at the psi number i have no idea lol) now you port the heads and intake, open up the exhaust, install headers, get an intake etc and still run the stock pulley it may only produce 5psi (guessing psi number again) do to the engine flowing better so the air isnt backing up enough to build as much boost....
Anyone know what the boost is for the diff pully sizes on a M90?
And is the M112 capable of bolting to a L67
if so what are the boost levels for those pullys?
Cant touch my engine for another 30k miles but I can at least start to get ready.
So it works diff then a turbo?
Like on a tuner car a set size turbo will push 16 psi boost.
Also, a 'set size turbo' pushes 16 psi boost. Why? Because that is what the wastegate is set for. Once you reach 16 psi (gauge pressure, not absolute) in the manifold on this hypothetical setup- the wastegate will open partially, to allow some exhaust gas to bypass the hot side of the turbo, and to maintain 16 psi in the manifold.
If you place this same turbo on another engine of relatively the same size and characteristics (lets say on a 2.0L I4 instead of a 1.8L I4)- it can still be set to run the same 16 psi via the wastegate. The only time this turbo would exceed 16 psi- is if it were put on an engine so small, that the same size wastegate could not bypass enough exhaust gas to keep the airflow levels low enough. The only time this turbo would not be able to hit 16 psi- is if it were put on an engine so large, that it could not flow sufficient air to reach 16 psi on said engine (we're ignoring RPM here, and saying all these engines run the same RPM).
This is not at all how a typical, positive displacement supercharger works.
Im looking for like a 3.6 will push 12 psi, 3.5 13psi, 3.4 14 psi, ect.
my goal is around 18 psi.
That should be pretty easy, and relatively inexpensive. You shouldn't port the heads, install an aftermarket camshaft, or anything else that would make the engine breathe better. This would all lower your manifold psi. I don't think 18 psi is possible on a stock engine without knocking- so you'd likely have to install an intercooler to keep knock away- and then just keep dropping pullies until you reach your 18 psi goal. The engine isn't going to make very good power, but at least you will hit your 18 psi goal pretty easily.
I looked at other superchargers but I cant seem to find many for the l67.
I guess my real question here is- why are you trying to swap superchargers already? Is your stock one maxed out as far as mods go? M90's have made over 400 whp, if you're shooting for beyond that- maybe you should be thinking about a turbo instead. Besides, the 18 psi goal can happen on an M90.
mp112 I saw could fit but it would have same parasitic effect as our m90 or more.
The bigger the supercharger's spinning parts (ie m112 vs m90), the more hp it takes to spin. The faster you spin it, the more air you move, the more power it takes to spin.
the tvst R1900 is basically equivalent to our m90 but cant find that either.
I have seen but cant find what supercharger to use and there doesn't seem to be anywhere that compares the parasitic effects and heat generated from them to use as a comparison.
I did see that the TVST R1900 is less parasitic and creates less heat but eaton does not sell them directly and magnuson is the only place I found it.
I was thinking a 2.8 pulley would get me the 18 psi I wanted but needed to make sure.
I know getting it to breath more reduces the back pressure the supercharge fights with but I didnt think that had to do with the psi boost numbers.
What you need to get a gauge for is knock (like an aeroforce). Run the smallest pulley you can without knock, and with decent spark timing- and be done with it.
I really think you need to change your approach. Forget about swapping superchargers to something non-M90 unless you've just got a bunch of money you want to blow. Instead of setting some holy grail boost number- forget that, and get a power goal in mind. Then, we can tell you what kind of combination to run to hit that goal (or if it is even possible). I think you will be a lot happier in the end.
Here is the setup I was going to run. A 4.2 stroker kit with ceramic coated pistons. 8.2:1 compression with a slight mill on the heads and block to bump it to 8.5:1 compression. Fully ported and polished heads with ceramic coated valves and beef them up to handle the load I am going to put on it (also dont know if it works on chevys but on mopars if you cut the valves and the port it sits on to 28* it improves flow on bottom end but you lose some high end power at high RMP). Aftermarket Camshaft Have not decided which. Headers. Worked exhaust with deleted u bend ect. Ported and matched intake milled for IC room and better flow. IC for roots blower from ZZP. Not the short stack. Worked M90 housing polished and ported and a pulley drop. Northstar throttle body. Cooler T stat. Hotter plugs. Billet fuel rails for more flow if I need it. bigger injectors. And if I can find it a pulley kit for the L67. Of course this will be bolted to a built Trany. And thats all I can think of off the top of my head.
My friend had his del sole built and his turbos were set at 20psi he made +500hp. He started blowing hoses so he dropped it 13psi and still made 350 ish same small 4 banger. It was a completely built engine. He was the one who told me to try for 18 psi boost for my engine build. Its not like I dont know about engines I just dont know about boosted engines and some of the new tech. And my comment about R1900 being the same is that the R1900 is eaton's TVST replacement for the M90. It fills the supercharger spot that the M90 had like the R2300 fills the spot for the M112. And Magnuson superchargers are around $8k for the IC R2300 setup and that would probably equal the rest of the engines build or more. And as i said befor I am building from the bottom up, so I have not maxed out the M90 but I was looking for the best option to use. I dont want to get a few grand into a build just so say ah damn I should have bought the Novi instead.
My friend had his del sole built and his turbos were set at 20psi he made +500hp. He started blowing hoses so he dropped it 13psi and still made 350 ish same small 4 banger. It was a completely built engine. He was the one who told me to try for 18 psi boost for my engine build. Its not like I dont know about engines I just dont know about boosted engines and some of the new tech. And my comment about R1900 being the same is that the R1900 is eaton's TVST replacement for the M90. It fills the supercharger spot that the M90 had like the R2300 fills the spot for the M112. And Magnuson superchargers are around $8k for the IC R2300 setup and that would probably equal the rest of the engines build or more. And as i said befor I am building from the bottom up, so I have not maxed out the M90 but I was looking for the best option to use. I dont want to get a few grand into a build just so say ah damn I should have bought the Novi instead.
A 4.2 stroker kit with ceramic coated pistons. 8.2:1 compression with a slight mill on the heads and block to bump it to 8.5:1 compression.
Also, if you stick with an M90, you don't want to drop to lower compression. Many of the record M90 builds were done with higher compression. It's silly to spend that kind of money, only to end up back at stock L67 compression. If you're dead set on 8.5:1, get a stock L67 bottom end, and be done with it- you'll be glad in the long run. Put that extra $4k+ into mods that actually make power, or put that money in the bank.
You also don't want to be milling so much off the heads to get .3 more compression. You actually don't really want to mill the heads much at all. If the heads are warped, just take off enough to get them straight, and leave it. There is enough flex there as it is without adding extra head bolts- you don't want to make it worse.
it improves flow on bottom end but you lose some high end power at high RMP
And thats all I can think of off the top of my head.
He started blowing hoses so he dropped it 13psi and still made 350 ish same small 4 banger.
He was the one who told me to try for 18 psi boost for my engine build.
On top of that- why 18, would 19 make too much power? lol
Saying to shoot for x boost number is just plain silly, especially on an M90 setup. If you do all the mods you say you are, put some real heads on there, and a good sized cam- I don't know if you'll even be able to hit 18 psi with an M90. So if you made 375whp, but only had 15 psi- you'd be disappointed? I think you get me point about trying to quote boost numbers- it just doesn't make any sense.
And as i said befor I am building from the bottom up
I dont want to get a few grand into a build just so say ah damn I should have bought the Novi instead.
As to the statement quoted above- when you end up with $10k in this engine and trans as you're talking about, and you're still sub 400 whp, I'd bet you're going to say 'I should have bought a turbo instead'. Nothing sucks more than getting beat by someone who has less money and less work into their car- and theirs is more streetable and gets better gas mileage. If you're friend's del sol really makes 350 whp, and is capable of 500 whp- I'd bet he'll be able to beat you at any power level as long as you have an M90- assuming he can actually get the car to hook due to the weight difference.
Last edited by bumpin96monte; Jun 1, 2012 at 08:21 AM.
Ok. I guesse I will just have to swap to a turbo then. The Stroker was because with mopar blocks they usually have a short stroke and putting in a 4" crank yeilds massive power gains. Turns a 340 into a 416 and it is a monster. I have always built motors from the botom up that way no matter how crazy I get down the road with whats going on up to I will never need to redue whats down low. I blew an old 273 out because I redid the top end and the bottom couldn't take the extra compression. The mill was not going to be to crazy max mill on our block and heads is around .030 each if you do max it boosts compression by .25:1 each. so doing a half mill .015 I would still have three ish more rebuilds and would have a garantee my my seals were tight. Ford taurus my friend had he did not mill the heads after the rebuild and never could get them to seal he had to strip it down mill and put it back on. I went to tech school for auto mechanics in highschool so I worked on alot of my friends cars. Wasn't very good at it made alot of mistakes so never kept going. And the 18 psi was for a built engine I thought that would be implied. He estimated that with a boosted 18psi on a built engine that all the power I would be able to get to the road. Around 550-600 crank hp. I assume he told me that because he couldnt get his del sol to grab. The 28* backcut is out then. 600 crank is what I would be shooting for.
The Stroker was because with mopar blocks they usually have a short stroke and putting in a 4" crank yeilds massive power gains. Turns a 340 into a 416 and it is a monster.
Now, lets say you have a 3.4" pulley on the M90, with a 6.9" crank pulley. That would mean for every 1 revolution of the engine, the s/c (which displaces 90 cubic inches per revolution) would spin 2.02 revolutions. Since it is a 4 stroke engine, you would double the number of engine revolutions- and that would give you 4.04 revolutions of the supercharger per 1 engine cycle. Multiply that by 90 and you get 363.6 cubic inches output by the supercharger per complete engine cycle (we'll assume the engine uses all of the air given to it).
Now, take out 5 bolts, and slap on a 3.2" pulley, and you now get 2.16 SC revolutions per crank rev, or 4.32 SC revolutions per engine cycle. Multiplied by 90, you get 388.8 cubic inches output by the supercharger per complete engine cycle.
That gives you a difference of 25.2 cubic inches, or 0.42L of extra air. So you could spend $4k+ on a stroker kit and all the machine shop work and labor of pulling the engine for an extra 0.4L of air, or you could spend 10 minutes and $30 and get an increase of 0.42L.
Obviously I am ignoring a ton of variables here- volumetric efficiency, rod ratio, supercharger efficiency, etc- but the point is to illustrate that on a boosted engine, the actual displacement of the engine isn't as important- because you can make up for that displacement by forcing more air in (assuming you can keep it from knocking).
I have always built motors from the botom up that way no matter how crazy I get down the road with whats going on up to I will never need to redue whats down low. I blew an old 273 out because I redid the top end and the bottom couldn't take the extra compression.
The 3800 has been more than proven to handle huge power on a stock bottom end- there have been cars in the 10s and 9s in the 1/4 on a stock bottom end. The key is to keep it from knocking. Keep the knock at or near zero, and you'll be fine. Let the KR get out of control, and you're going to chip pistons (aftermarket or not)
That's not to say a 3800 bottom end has never failed- of course you're going to have the occasional manufacturing defect, but cheap and they're a dime a dozen in the junkyard- and 99% of the time, the bottom end holds just fine to huge power. You're going to waste an easy $1000 on all the machine work and parts to rebuild the bottom end (plus the $3k stroker kit)- and you know what you'll end up with? An engine that is more likely to spin a bearing, or trash the bottom end than a stocker. The reliability of rebuilt 3800's with all kinds of 'high hp' aftermarket parts isn't that great- its actually worse than stock.
Spending money to upgrade things that don't need upgraded is a waste of money. I've seen plenty of people with $10k engines get beat down by people with half as much money because they upgraded crap that didn't need upgrading- they had upgraded coils, and upgraded wires, and E99 spark plugs, TPS enhancers, and a custom built bottom end, and all kinds of junk that doesn't add power or help anything. ZZP used to brag about demodding cars to remove useless or crappy aftermarket stuff- and the person left with more power and a more reliable car.
I feel bad for the people I've seen through the years post up all the money they spent building 'bullet proof' 3800 bottom ends, and then end up dynoing terrible numbers for the money they've spent.
The mill was not going to be to crazy max mill on our block and heads is around .030 each if you do max it boosts compression by .25:1 each. so doing a half mill .015
Safest bet would be just to buy already ported heads from a reputable vendor- that way you know what you're getting, and not what some random machine shop managed to work up.
I would still have three ish more rebuilds and would have a garantee my my seals were tight.
Ford taurus my friend had he did not mill the heads after the rebuild and never could get them to seal he had to strip it down mill and put it back on.
Wasn't very good at it made alot of mistakes so never kept going.

And the 18 psi was for a built engine I thought that would be implied. He estimated that with a boosted 18psi on a built engine that all the power I would be able to get to the road. Around 550-600 crank hp.
So setting a boost number goal for an engine build doesn't make any sense at all. Saying 18 psi is going to make 550-600 hp is a complete shot in the dark, and is completely dependent on tons of other variables. Maybe it will, maybe it won't, but it's pointless to try and shoot for a certain boost number- if you understand how engines work, and how many variables there are to arrive at a boost number- you'll understand why it doesn't make any sense, especially on a supercharged setup. For a "fully built engine" with a turbo setup- why shoot for 18 psi? Sure you can get a good wastegate controller to make sure it hits 18 and stays steady, but so what? Why 18 and not 20? Given that all the rest of the engine stays the same, 20psi isn't going to be drastically different.
I assume he told me that because he couldnt get his del sol to grab.
on a built engine that all the power I would be able to get to the road. Around 550-600 crank hp.
I'll tell you- on my GXP, it should do about 240 whp (300*.8), and has 255mm wide (about the widest tire you could run for DD'ing) Bridgestone Potenza RE050As (a pretty sporty tire, but still very much a street tire)- and I have to peddle through half of first gear before it'll hook at WOT. My monte was even worse (although I never dyno'd it)- before the whipple, it was spinning anywhere in 1st on 245mm BFG KDWs. I can only imagine with double that power- you're going to be peddling through most of 2nd on street tires.
Sure with track prep, cable mod, and some beefy slicks- it should hook ok- but you aren't going to be driving around the street like that. If you go this route- you'd better start looking for a 1" trans chain since they don't make the sets anymore- I've seen them going for well over $1k for the setup on cgp.
Ok. I guesse I will just have to swap to a turbo then.
600 crank is what I would be shooting for.
A supercharged setup will be tough- only 3 supercharged setups have ever met that power goal- one CSC setup did 495whp, Intense's shop car did 504whp on a KB Blowzilla, and Jonbob's whipple car did 536 whp (and everyone knows what kind of money and time is invested in that car!). I don't know much about the CSC car, but I can tell you the other two have/had some serious engineering and mods done to them.
With a turbo, there are multiple cars that have broke 600 crank hp, even with relatively mild cams- so that will by far be your best bet. Get a Z7 or Stattama turbo kit, a nice cam like an ST2, a huge FMIC, some ported heads, and a good tune and you'll be well on your way- probably for less than you originally budgeted.
Since it sounds like you haven't started any of this yet- one more thing to consider- you're going to dump $4k into the bottom end with the stroker. $2k into a good set of heads, $750 or so into the fuel system, $4k for an 18 psi turbo kit, or more for a whipple/KB/etc s/c, $4k+ for a built trans, $500 for a set of drag radials to try and make it hook up, and we haven't even touched exhaust, intake, and the nickel and dime stuff- plugs, tstat, etc- so we've got an easy $15k+ there. On street tires, maybe it runs 12s in the 1/4, on slicks maybe high 10s, on the street on street tires- you're limited to roll racing only. The other option you should consider there is what other vehicle options you have. If you include the price of your car- you could build a crazy quick car for the strip for that kind of money. IE- pick up a cheapo fox mustang, gut it, get a used LSX from a junkyard- a 5.3 or a 5.7 or something on the cheaper end- build a basic turbo setup, etc. Or pick up a used LS camaro of firebird, and turbo that. I'm not trying to encourage not modding your monte, especially with the 3800- they're great for doing bolt ons and shaving 2-3 seconds off. Beyond that, the car tends to get more unreliable due to being chock full of aftermarket parts, because it's fwd- its slow on street tires from a dig, and the results for money put in start tapering off. At a certain point, you need to realize that if you started with a quicker platform, you could be going quicker for cheaper. Especially when you're first starting off, now is a good time to evaluate this. But I do suggest doing some searching on clubgp or something first- look at how a lot of the high hp guys have demodded and moved on- and look what they move on to LS camaros, G8s, GTOs, C5 and base C6 vettes, terminators, etc- things that are faster, more reliable at the desired power level, and have more ultimate potential to go fast. Just some food for thought I like to mention whenever anyone starts talking about dumping huge money into a wbody.
Last edited by bumpin96monte; Jun 1, 2012 at 09:03 PM.
My Dart is quick but its only got a 318 with 340 top end mild head and intake work. Was thinking about building the monte cus I really like the monte and it is 1000 times more efficient then the 318. It would be easier to mod the swinger and it weighs 1000lbs less. What you saying is I should prob just do a mild build on the 3800 get it to around 350-400 crank or less and just mod the **** out of my swinger. Cus no matter what I do the monte it will never go as fast as I want it to.















