Moderator: The Mod Squad
Twolitre wrote:Identical modifications? Identical boost pressure?
One member here installed a CT26/T04E onto his ST205 after his CT20b failed and said it was considerably quicker on 15 psi than that of the CT20b on 18psi
No other mods were done before or after installing the new turbo.
I find it hard to believe the turbo with the smaller compressor and the smaller turbine will make more!
nemesis wrote:Grey cam wheel cover = gen II, black cam wheel cover = gen III, both have plain alloy cam covers and distributor ignition. If it's got a plastic cam cover in black or red and direct fire ignition it's a VVTi engine. My money would be on gen III though.
Wildcard wrote:The problem with the CT20B is that you basically can't upgrade or rebuild them, at least from what I've found available in NZ.
Basically the answer is this: CT20B's are rebuildable, but unless there's something specifically wrong with them it's not advised to do so. Ceramic turbine turbos are highly susceptible to failing after rebuild - the bonding between the ceramic wheel and the steel shaft often isn't strong enough to survive the disassembly-reassembly process. Usually any turbo that leaves here which is a rebuilt ceramic will have no warranty on it.
Replacement all-steel shafts aren't available for the 20B - Toyota don't sell the WRC ones separately, and no other third party manufacturer make them. That leaves the option of retrofitting another shaft from a different turbo, however this is harder than it looks. Toyota use a shaft profile that is different to just about every other turbo in existence, and at very least you'd be looking at a large machining cost on top of an expensive new shaft, IF you could find a suitable shaft to start with.
We've just recently retro'd our first steel shafts into a 2.5L TT (1JZ) Supra with good success, and potentially the same could happen for the 20B in the future, but I wouldn't be holding your breath that parts will become available.
the bearings and piston ring seals are available for them, so from a pure time-expired rebuild point of view they're perfectly servicable
Ceramic turbine turbos are highly susceptible to failing after rebuild - the bonding between the ceramic wheel and the steel shaft often isn't strong enough to survive the disassembly-reassembly process. Usually any turbo that leaves here which is a rebuilt ceramic will have no warranty on it.
Quint wrote:Not just cock, large cock.
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