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-   -   ok can you SC(supercharge) a na rx-7 (https://www.rx7club.com/2nd-generation-specific-1986-1992-17/ok-can-you-sc-supercharge-na-rx-7-a-454153/)

1990rx-7newb 08-16-05 07:53 PM

ok can you SC(supercharge) a na rx-7
 
i have been doing a lil reading and very curious can you SC a N/A rx-7 and what are the results and is it better than turborcharging?

MRX_Rotary 08-16-05 07:58 PM

You can supercharge anything, with money. Immediate boost is one benefit of being supercharged rather than turbo.

1990rx-7newb 08-16-05 08:03 PM

ok is it wasier...because i know to turbo a NA engine takes a LOT of fabrication....so with the high compression of a NA motor is it easier and better to do??

staticguitar313 08-16-05 08:04 PM

Search, its been done before.
Ups. No turbo lag, easier to pass emissions b/c there's nothing blocking the path between the engine and the catalytic converter(s). No need for BOV (in most situations)
Downs. More for the eccentric sharft to spin. Mostly mid-range power no high end. Placement can be difficult if you have all your AC, PS and emissions etc.

The rotary engine likes the turbo. :D

If you do any kind of forced induction wrong kiss your engine goodbye.

S/c and Turboing an NA take about the same amount of HARD WORK :rolleyes:

DemonicPupil 08-16-05 08:07 PM

Doing anything to an NA engine = fabrication.. turbo, SC.. dun really matter... even with the 3k+ Camden kit i think you still have to do some drillin and shit.. correct me if I'm wrong boys...

I want to finish my SC project, but just don't have cash atm.

1990rx-7newb 08-16-05 08:14 PM

ok so what kindaof performance can you coaxs out of a NA?

staticguitar313 08-16-05 08:17 PM

whatever your tuning abilities are

MRX_Rotary 08-16-05 08:20 PM

Yeah, it's all up to what you want. You can get a Peripheral Port N/A pushing out, what? 350HP IIRC? But that's strictly for racing applications, not street.

BTW, search is your friend... and spell check too.

1990rx-7newb 08-16-05 08:47 PM

ok can you suggest any good web sites to look at for tuning a NA

Rancid7 08-16-05 08:52 PM

IMHO your are already at the best website to find information JUST USE THE SEARCH FEATURE !!!

ramtookrazy 08-16-05 09:18 PM

rx7club knows about everything

adrock3217 08-16-05 09:26 PM

I don't think anyone has made the note yet. For the power:money ratio...turbo is all out better than supercharging for these cars. Most 3,000 dollar supercharger its, custom or not, will net something like..250 RWHP.

arghx 08-16-05 09:51 PM

^ which can be done for like a grand on a Turbo II if you get some good deals

RotaryEvolution 08-16-05 10:39 PM


Originally Posted by staticguitar313
Search, its been done before.
Ups. No turbo lag, easier to pass emissions b/c there's nothing blocking the path between the engine and the catalytic converter(s). No need for BOV (in most situations)
Downs. More for the eccentric sharft to spin. Mostly mid-range power no high end. Placement can be difficult if you have all your AC, PS and emissions etc.

The rotary engine likes the turbo. :D

If you do any kind of forced induction wrong kiss your engine goodbye.

S/c and Turboing an NA take about the same amount of HARD WORK :rolleyes:



may be ok to pass emissions in some states but in california and many other states it is an illegal mod and will fail the visual inspection.

Jager 08-16-05 11:08 PM


Originally Posted by staticguitar313
Search, its been done before.
Ups. No turbo lag, easier to pass emissions b/c there's nothing blocking the path between the engine and the catalytic converter(s). No need for BOV (in most situations)
Downs. More for the eccentric sharft to spin. Mostly mid-range power no high end. Placement can be difficult if you have all your AC, PS and emissions etc.

The rotary engine likes the turbo. :D

If you do any kind of forced induction wrong kiss your engine goodbye.

S/c and Turboing an NA take about the same amount of HARD WORK :rolleyes:


Turbo lag? A centrifical blower on an RX-7 (IE Paxton) doesn't start making good power until 4,000 RPM.

Placement is relatively simple, check out IntegraLS, just relocate the throttle body and place it where the AC and PS was. Since pussies use AC and PSing anyways :eek: .

And yes the Rotary engine does like the turbo made from all the fun exhaust gases we push out.

Also it has be PROVEN TIME AND TIME AGAIN that forced induction on an NA is just fine IF IT IS TUNED CORRECTLY. I hate when people tell others that. Sonik, Aaron Cake, Integra and ALL proving that wrong.

staticguitar313 08-16-05 11:33 PM


Originally Posted by Jager
Turbo lag? A centrifical blower on an RX-7 (IE Paxton) doesn't start making good power until 4,000 RPM.

Placement is relatively simple, check out IntegraLS, just relocate the throttle body and place it where the AC and PS was. Since pussies use AC and PSing anyways :eek: .

And yes the Rotary engine does like the turbo made from all the fun exhaust gases we push out.

Also it has be PROVEN TIME AND TIME AGAIN that forced induction on an NA is just fine IF IT IS TUNED CORRECTLY. I hate when people tell others that. Sonik, Aaron Cake, Integra and ALL proving that wrong.


Wasn't talking about centrifical, fuck those, i'm talking a big honking whipple blower!!!!! Yeah i know we can do forced induction on NA i have half the part to turbo mine,, I said if you do any kind of forced induction WRONG kiss your engine goodbye, read the whole sentence man. :rolleyes: :eek: :D :cool:

Jager 08-16-05 11:41 PM


Originally Posted by staticguitar313
Wasn't talking about centrifical, fuck those, i'm talking a big honking whipple blower!!!!! Yeah i know we can do forced induction on NA i have half the part to turbo mine,, I said if you do any kind of forced induction WRONG kiss your engine goodbye, read the whole sentence man. :rolleyes: :eek: :D :cool:

Sorry, if I could read minds, I'de be a millionaire ;).


Stating that doing anything wrong with your engine will blow it is just common sense. I thought you meant more in your statement instead of just stating a basic fact. Either way I don't care :jerkit: ,

88IntegraLS 08-17-05 01:02 AM


Originally Posted by 1990rx-7newb
ok is it wasier...because i know to turbo a NA engine takes a LOT of fabrication....so with the high compression of a NA motor is it easier and better to do??

Neither are easy. The most simple path to a fast RX7 is start with the right car: a TII.

Jager 08-17-05 06:24 PM


Originally Posted by 88IntegraLS
Neither are easy. The most simple path to a fast RX7 is start with the right car: a TII.

Ain't that the truth.

Madrx7racer 08-17-05 06:40 PM

first of all.....you can TUrbo an NA by doing an engine swap.......that's the EASIEST way to get more power.

a guy on here SC'ed his vert and only got 187rwhp (37 hp more than my fiancee's NA dynoed to the wheels) which seems like a waste of cash........you can turbo the NA motor but again you will need to fabricate a lot of crap for the FC......


the MOST you can push in an NA without porting the motor is anywhere between 150-160 rwhp......

Jager 08-17-05 06:45 PM

CodeBlue has thousands into her car for 209HP.

If can, find an old Paxton or go Whipple.

Madrx7racer 08-17-05 06:48 PM

those thousands would have yielded more HP if she had done a full TII swap and MODDED the car........wouldn't you agree?

88IntegraLS 08-17-05 11:28 PM


Originally Posted by Jager
CodeBlue has thousands into her car for 209HP.

If can, find an old Paxton or go Whipple.

Damn shame too, if only she knew in advance how much worse a straight two lobe rotor based roots blower is compared to the Eaton M90, which itself isn't spectacular.

The only way to compete with the power and efficiency of turbos is to pick a belt driven compressor with near the same efficiency (ie. how much more heat the charger puts into the compressed air than it would have had if based on the ideal gas law).

Oh well. At least she has 209 rwhp, which should be kind of fun.

Dltreezan 08-18-05 06:39 AM

88 how much do you expect to get out of your setup?

Mankdrake 2661 08-18-05 07:11 PM

Isn't boost, boost?
Whether it's from a turbo or an SC? The only major difference is what RPM it starts at. So wouldn't SCing an N/A or turboing an N/A other than fabing parts be equally hard on the motor?

SonicRaT 08-18-05 07:32 PM

No, boost is NOT boost. PSI in and of itself is useless. They're all compressors, with varying volumetric efficiencies and adiabatic efficiencies. The turbo's generally have a pretty good efficiency (around 74%), where-as roots blowers are down around 54% or lower! (The camden was 41%! YIKES!) Whipple blowers are great because they're up around turbos (70-72% or higher), but they draw a lot of power off of the engine, and they aren't as modular as a turbo (where you can adjust boost with a wastegate, etc).

Mankdrake 2661 08-18-05 08:26 PM

Excuse my ignorance......but what "efficiency" are you talking about?
I was just saying that you can blow a motor with a turbo
just like you can blow one with a SC.

Boost is Boost.

How you get the boost is what separates a turbo from a supercharger.

ddub 08-18-05 09:17 PM


Originally Posted by Jager
CodeBlue has thousands into her car for 209HP.

If can, find an old Paxton or go Whipple.

Whoa there, Deena's car is a LOT different!!

She's using s4 TII rotors, 8.5:1 freaking compression! And also TII irons rather than n/a, supercharging from that is different than supercharging from n/a rotors. It'd be different if she had used n/a rotors.

ddub 08-18-05 09:19 PM


Originally Posted by Madrx7racer
first of all.....you can TUrbo an NA by doing an engine swap.......that's the EASIEST way to get more power.

a guy on here SC'ed his vert and only got 187rwhp (37 hp more than my fiancee's NA dynoed to the wheels) which seems like a waste of cash........you can turbo the NA motor but again you will need to fabricate a lot of crap for the FC......


the MOST you can push in an NA without porting the motor is anywhere between 150-160 rwhp......

That's not exactly turboing an n/a... that's doing a damn engine swap.

Add up the freaking dollars you'd spend on the engine, shipping (if you have to), misc stuff for install, new exhaust, other parts you might need, ecu/harness if you're going to do that, plus additional mods that you keep talking about. Now take that and get a standalone, good turbo, put it on your n/a with proper intercooling, fuel, and tuning, and you'll have MORE power than the TII swap...

Uhhh, the supercharged vert did NOT do 187rwhp... Pianoprodigy, if I'm thinking about who you are, did 230 at the wheels. https://www.rx7club.com/2nd-generation-specific-1986-1992-17/230-whp-supercharged-vert-complete-dyno-car-video-sc-comparisons-431570/

That was a 65rwhp increase from before the charger, and only at 6psi.

SonicRaT 08-18-05 10:19 PM


Originally Posted by Mankdrake 2661
Excuse my ignorance......but what "efficiency" are you talking about?
I was just saying that you can blow a motor with a turbo
just like you can blow one with a SC.

Boost is Boost.

How you get the boost is what separates a turbo from a supercharger.

I already mentioned the efficiencies.

Boost != boost.

6psi on a blower is extremely different than 6psi on a turbo. Why? Because 2psi of that could be from the heat the blower puts off alone, where-as a turbo would be denser air, thus making more power, at the same boost...

88IntegraLS 08-18-05 10:35 PM

6 psi @ 240 degrees (ie roots blower) does not contain as much oxygen as 6 psi at 180 degrees (ie. turbo).

Black91n/a 08-18-05 11:44 PM

In terms of power boost does not always equal boost. Most importantly is that a supercharger runs off the crank (or e-shaft in this case) so it saps engine power to turn it. BUT a turbo also requires some engine power to operate. A turbo causes backpressure, so the exhaust has a much harder time escaping the motor, and the motor has to use some power to push the exhaust past the turbo's impeller. However, this loss of power is less dramatic than a superchargers power draw, as a turbo also uses the thermal energy from the hot exhaust to power it. If you have two identical motors running the same boost at the same intake air temperature, one with a supercharger and one with a turbo and they both have the same efficiency, then the turbo motor WILL be more powerful. There are advantages and disadvantages of both, and it's up to the owner to decide what's best. For autocross, a supercharger is generally better, as it will have boost right out of the corners at low revs, whereas if you never get down on revs like in road racing or drag racing a turbo is often better, and for street driving it's personal preference.

88IntegraLS 08-18-05 11:52 PM


Originally Posted by Black91n/a
a turbo also uses the thermal energy from the hot exhaust to power it. If you have two identical motors running the same boost at the same intake air temperature, one with a supercharger and one with a turbo and they both have the same efficiency, then the turbo motor WILL be more powerful.

I'm not sure i follow, do you mean to say that the expanding exhaust gas pushes against the rotor and the impellor while it expands, doing work on both? I could see how that would work, although only to the point where the blowdown cycle has an increasing chamber volume. Once the rotor has to push out the gases through the impeller, the rotor would be doing work on the gases which do work on the impeller, so the impeller steals energy from the rotor (and eshaft).

Anywhere I can research this identical motor, identical boost test you mention? It seems reasonable.

Jager 08-19-05 01:28 PM


Originally Posted by dDuB
Whoa there, Deena's car is a LOT different!!

She's using s4 TII rotors, 8.5:1 freaking compression! And also TII irons rather than n/a, supercharging from that is different than supercharging from n/a rotors. It'd be different if she had used n/a rotors.

Well still, there would be a substaintal (omg I can't spell) difference I know, even in boost response. But with the ITB and a few various other things, wouldn't you think she'd be at least pushing past PianoProdigy's car? (Who did a very fine build FYI).

SonicRaT 08-19-05 02:04 PM

It'd still suck even if she had N/A rotors, because she'd be damn near detonating that thing with how much heat it cranks out ontop of the higher compression.

These threads are rather pointless though, everybody thinks PSI means everything, and it's always a bunch of inexperienced(read none) people rambling on about it.

mcnannay 08-19-05 02:33 PM

not a pointless thread at all, i actually learned something, so thanks for debating...

most people on this forum already believe turbocharging offers the best performance in most cases. And now you have helped to explain why. I would still like to know a bit more though. Why exactly is the compressed air from a supercharger so much hotter than that from a turbocharger?

SonicRaT 08-19-05 05:16 PM

It has less adiabatic efficiency, so it generates more heat in compressing than say a turbo would (again, like 52% vs 74% or so)

88IntegraLS 08-19-05 08:41 PM

Roots blowers don't normally use intercoolers either, sometimes they use air to water "aftercoolers" which don't cool as well as air to air intercoolers, unless you fill their fluid reservoir with ice water, which will only stay cold for a little while.

But yeah, what he said ^ Turbos and twin screw superchargers will make the same boost as a roots blower but at a lower temperature. Air temp always rises when air is compressed: Pressure * Volume = Number of moles of gas * constant * Temperature, or Pv=nRt for short (the ideal gas law, very fundamental equation in chemistry and physics).

Problem with roots blowers is the air is beating back and fourth out the discharge port because the blowers don't actually compress the air, they just move it like a giant air pump. Turbos and twin screw chargers actually compress the air and then spit it out. This allow it to come out smoothly into the intercooler pipes, which would have pressurized air in them already.

SonicRaT 08-19-05 08:52 PM

Have you seen those peltier Air/Water coolers? I've used peltiers a lot, but I can't imagine the power draw required to cool efficiently... Any thoughts?

88IntegraLS 08-19-05 09:30 PM

Lol, are they like an AC unit that is for the intake air? I've always wondered about a setup like that, lol. I think I'll stick with a good fmic and traditional setup for a while, maybe CO2 spraying on the fmic if I get desperate to hit 12's.

SonicRaT 08-19-05 09:36 PM

No, it uses the Peltier effect, where it transfers heat from one side of a plate to the other, I commonly use them in computers to cool CPU's (I've had athlons running sub-freezing using them), but those were almost a 250watt draw, lol. And they're very unreliable, but I saw some intercoolers using them the other day, and I thought it was pretty interesting. As long as you can keep the water relatively cooled, even at room temp, they work well.

Black91n/a 08-20-05 06:08 PM

I haven't seen identical motor tests, but damn near. I'm fairly well versed on forced induction miata's (my dad's is turbocharged), and there are many different turbo and supercharger kits. The turbo's will make a little more peak power (not a lot typically for similiar setups), but the supercharged ones have better low end power. I think what the aftermarket needs is a fusion of technology. We need a centrifugal supercharger for it's high efficiency with a continuously variable transmission for good low end boost and easy electronic boost control. I figure you could use compressed air from the supercharger to power the CVT and use an electronic boost controller so that you could get full boost at half the RPM's of a non CVT system and then keep it there right up untill redline. Also changing boost could be as simple as pressing a few buttons, no pulley changes needed. The CVT centrifugal blower part has been done before, now all we need to do is get someone like Vortech to make a modern one that'd fir our cars. If this was available, it'd be my first choice for forced induction, as I've always liked the idea of a centrifugal blower, but didn't like the idea of little low end gain.

SonicRaT 08-20-05 08:52 PM


Originally Posted by Black91n/a
I haven't seen identical motor tests, but damn near. I'm fairly well versed on forced induction miata's (my dad's is turbocharged), and there are many different turbo and supercharger kits. The turbo's will make a little more peak power (not a lot typically for similiar setups), but the supercharged ones have better low end power. I think what the aftermarket needs is a fusion of technology. We need a centrifugal supercharger for it's high efficiency with a continuously variable transmission for good low end boost and easy electronic boost control. I figure you could use compressed air from the supercharger to power the CVT and use an electronic boost controller so that you could get full boost at half the RPM's of a non CVT system and then keep it there right up untill redline. Also changing boost could be as simple as pressing a few buttons, no pulley changes needed. The CVT centrifugal blower part has been done before, now all we need to do is get someone like Vortech to make a modern one that'd fir our cars. If this was available, it'd be my first choice for forced induction, as I've always liked the idea of a centrifugal blower, but didn't like the idea of little low end gain.

A twin-screw is just as efficient as a centriugal... The problems with them is the static drive, a variable drive would be nice, but then you're mimicing a turbo anyway.

The best supercharger for the FC is the twin-screw, hands down it's been proven over and over again. How can you have a similarly setup turbo vs supercharger setup? It doesn't much exist. Even the stock turbo's make more power throughout the ENTIRE powerband than the Camden units, and pretty much the same as the paxton setups. Considering most dyno's start at 2K rpm, if you compare most recent supercharged dyno's versus others, you'll see often that the turbo is making just as much torque already, and it just goes up from there, instead of staying flat.


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