metro turbo manifolds fit onto...
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- Minor Fan
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metro turbo manifolds fit onto...
hi guys, will the inlet and exhaust manifolds from a metro turbo fit onto a 1098?
cheers, michael.
cheers, michael.
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- Minor Fan
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now thats a good idea.
1098 turbo running low boost would be cool.
should be very easy with all metro bits.
boost will have to be low and will probably only make as much power as a standard 1275 but it would be different.
good luck
1098 turbo running low boost would be cool.
should be very easy with all metro bits.
boost will have to be low and will probably only make as much power as a standard 1275 but it would be different.
good luck
[img]http://i181.photobucket.com/albums/x17/superchargedfool/DSCF0024-1.jpg[/img]
cool cars don't die they just get cooler as they get older!
cool cars don't die they just get cooler as they get older!
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- Minor Fan
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- Minor Fan
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- Minor Fan
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bmc is correct 5 psi would be optimistic.
3 to 3.5psi would be more sensible.
metro turbo only ran 4 psi as standard if I remember correctly?
still a good idea to be different though. And when it blows up you could slot in a 1275 for real fun.
3 to 3.5psi would be more sensible.
metro turbo only ran 4 psi as standard if I remember correctly?
still a good idea to be different though. And when it blows up you could slot in a 1275 for real fun.
[img]http://i181.photobucket.com/albums/x17/superchargedfool/DSCF0024-1.jpg[/img]
cool cars don't die they just get cooler as they get older!
cool cars don't die they just get cooler as they get older!
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- Minor Fan
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well it looks like i may have located a 1275 so dont ned to worry about me in a ball of 5psi flames now 
i really like the idea of building something hat isnt the fastest thing around, but built well and is reliable as can be.
oh and how important is the turbo dizzy from a turbo metro??? are they that mush different?

i really like the idea of building something hat isnt the fastest thing around, but built well and is reliable as can be.
oh and how important is the turbo dizzy from a turbo metro??? are they that mush different?
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- Minor Addict
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Pretty vital, if you don't want fuel spraying everywhere.aussiemike wrote:oh and how important is the turbo dizzy from a turbo metro???
Not fundamentally different; The turbo carb has seals to cope with the pressure of the turbo blowing through it. I think there are other differences but that's the most important one.are they that much different?
Jim - New Forest, the Wiltshire bit
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- Minor Fan
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Erm, that was dizzy, not carb! Very useful info though.JimK wrote:Pretty vital, if you don't want fuel spraying everywhere.aussiemike wrote:oh and how important is the turbo dizzy from a turbo metro???
I'm guessing that the advance curve is different for the turboed engine so a standard distributor might cause pre-ignition. Maybe no vacuum advance too?
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- Minor Fan
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The turbo dizzy has very little advance curve - at high revs the advance needs to be cut back to stop pre-ignition. So yes, I would say you need that turbo dizzy. You really would be much better using a supercharger rather than a turbo! And no - it's not possible to fit a Mini engine to a Minor - not without serious modification anyway, the least of which is a crankshaft change, which means you lose the Turbo hardened crank, and it's there for a very good reason.



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- Minor Fan
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NO! It has a completely different flywheel mounting. The Mini flywheel sits on a taper end - with the clutch sitting ahead of it on a 'Primary Gear' that rotates on the crank when the clutch is 'out' but is locked to the crank when the clutch is 'in'. You can however have a 1275 'inline' crank hardened by Tuftriding - but it all costs money, and it will need regrinding afterwards. Ideally - it should be reground slightly oversize, then tuftrided, then ground again down to the final size. Expensive!



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1275 supercharged is the way to go but turbo is awsome because of noise and style of boost.
The turbo dizzy has very limited advance. The maestro dizzy is what I am using with a blob of weld strategically placed in the dizzy to limit advance.
Vizard states that roughly 1 degree of advance needs removing at revs for every 1 psi of boost. My dizzy advanced about 20 degrees and I limited it to about 12 degrees, that was more than I needed to but is on the safe side!
Good luck.
The turbo dizzy has very limited advance. The maestro dizzy is what I am using with a blob of weld strategically placed in the dizzy to limit advance.
Vizard states that roughly 1 degree of advance needs removing at revs for every 1 psi of boost. My dizzy advanced about 20 degrees and I limited it to about 12 degrees, that was more than I needed to but is on the safe side!
Good luck.
[img]http://i181.photobucket.com/albums/x17/superchargedfool/DSCF0024-1.jpg[/img]
cool cars don't die they just get cooler as they get older!
cool cars don't die they just get cooler as they get older!
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- Minor Fan
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