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Author: Subject: Turbo R1: Which inkectors?
JoaoCaldeira

posted on 21/10/09 at 07:22 PM Reply With Quote
Turbo R1: Which inkectors?

Those of you having already a turboed R1, which injectors have you used? Stock ones? Aftermarket? with which turbo? and how much boost?

I'm thinking about TD04HL-16T (Volvo S70 T5) with 5 psi, but I'm unsure if the stock injectors (2003 R1) can cope with that...

Thanks in advance,
Joao






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hobbsy

posted on 21/10/09 at 10:30 PM Reply With Quote
I'm also interested in the reply to this as I have the same turbo (from memory) and the same 2003 R1 engine.

You can get a bit more flow out of them by cheating with an adjustable fuel pressure regulator (whether it be 1:1 or rising rate). This takes a vacuum feed from the plenum / throttle bodies and ups the pressure with boost. You can also change the base pressure.

But equally if anyone knows of larger injectors or the right size/type/impedance that are suitable I'd be happy to know.

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afj

posted on 22/10/09 at 10:49 AM Reply With Quote
All i know is that they are nippon, around 14ohms and possibly flow around 210cc/hour maybe but ive got someone on the case so ill report back soon (cant you tell i have a desire for booooooost)





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T66

posted on 22/10/09 at 07:39 PM Reply With Quote
My old saab aero injectors (brown) flowed 210cc....

cheap as chips on ebay, as the Saab tuners replace them with green giants or 630cc dekas.

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T66

posted on 22/10/09 at 08:19 PM Reply With Quote
took a while to find, this one is a carb R1

http://www.turbo-bike.net/

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hobbsy

posted on 22/10/09 at 10:13 PM Reply With Quote
Took a while to find www.turbo-bike.net ?

Its the first hit when you google "turbo r1"

That site's been around for years - useful to know what power figures are attainable at what boost with what turbo etc. But as said its carbed so not much help WRT injectors...

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JoaoCaldeira

posted on 22/10/09 at 11:30 PM Reply With Quote
Found this (untrusted) information:
Operating pressure is 42.6 psi with a max of 73.5 PSI






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T66

posted on 23/10/09 at 02:06 AM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by hobbsy
Took a while to find www.turbo-bike.net ?

Its the first hit when you google "turbo r1"

That site's been around for years - useful to know what power figures are attainable at what boost with what turbo etc. But as said its carbed so not much help WRT injectors...



It was recovered from my mess of "favourites", hence it took a while, then I realised it was a carby R1 and posted it anyway.

If that helps at all, should of goggled it....

doh

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JoaoCaldeira

posted on 23/10/09 at 01:33 PM Reply With Quote
Ok... some more info taken here...

they are
INP-731/4 from NIPPON INJECTOR .

They also got some # on the side of the injectors , CDH210 .

Fuel pressure 284 kPa (2.84 kg/cm2, 40.4 psi)( fuel rail pressure )

Injectors resistace = 14.7 ohm .

Yamaha part# 5PW-13761-00-00

Dimensions here

Joćo






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hobbsy

posted on 23/10/09 at 01:49 PM Reply With Quote
Hmm, whacked "nippon injectors cdh" into google, check out the first few links, eg:

http://rswarrior.com/forums/t/140309.aspx

Points to CDH275's (allegedly 318cc/min - seems the 275 bit doesn't map directly to the flow rate but its probably proportional) here:

http://www.injectorwhse.com/servlet/the-21863/Fuel-Injector,-OEM-Numbers/Detail

at 55USD each, there are also slightly cheaper places selling lots of different ones but they don't have CDH part numbers listed next to them (neither does that link above tbh - I'm sure they can be looked up but I'm at work at the mo!).

It looks like it might fit as this is the stock injector:



and this is the ~30% higher flow part:



Edited to say - clearly if you go this route to getting more fuel in you're going to need to cut back the fuelling by ~30% from idle up to where you start making more power than stock in the map.

Another edit to say its worth double checking that MD319792 part number does equate to CDH275 - that rswarrior website is a forum for the Yamaha Roadstar which makes a far chunk less power than an R1. Bit strange then that its got 30% bigger injectors but maybe they aren't using them at anywhere near 85% duty cycle. I thought it was always best to fit injectors that matched the max fuel requirement fairly closely so you get the best atomisation at lower fuel demand levels.

Its a starting point and as injector prices go generally seems cheap enough. Certainly as soon as they are labelled "uprated injectors" for an application the price seems to rise a lot!

[Edited on 23/10/09 by hobbsy]

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JoaoCaldeira

posted on 23/10/09 at 03:01 PM Reply With Quote
I LOVE THE INTERNET.
How come I'm at work in Lisbon, Portugal, currently benchmarking an IBM machine in Monpellier, France, talking to a few locostbuilders in UK, and receiving information of injectors from US????

TOTALLY CRAZY!!!!


Never the less:
<injectors4u@aol.com>

I have 3 injectors that will be a drop in replacement for the CDH210, they offer a higher flow. they are listed below. I sell any of the listed injectors for $34.99 each plus S&H

what size injector do you need?

the CDH210 flows 240cc/min

1. CDH240E......256cc/min
2. CDH275........284cc/min
3 HDB305F......308cc/min

-x-x-x-x-x-x-

Brilliant.

How much boost do you plan to run?
How much cc will you need?

Did anyone used the stock injectros with low boost?

Joao






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afj

posted on 23/10/09 at 03:27 PM Reply With Quote
it seems that most companys selling turbo kits for the 2002/3 r1 dont list different or addional injectors if your running 250bhp but the stage 2 kits offering 300bhp list up rated injectors





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hobbsy

posted on 23/10/09 at 03:27 PM Reply With Quote
Nice find - Joao.

T'interweb is great isn't it

Are these injectors new or reconditioned as I see that site sells a lot of recon's.

Power wise if you assume the std ECU runs them at 85% duty cycle then and it makes say 150bhp (conservative) then just divide new size by old size and multiple by the bhp.

So CDH275's = 284/240 * 150 = 177.5 (18% increase)

HDB305F (are these definitely the same impedance?) = 305/240 = 190bhp (27% increase).

You can also get more out of them by increasing the duty cycle (via a PowerCommander) or upping the base pressure via an adjustable fuel pressure regulator (or a combination or both). But both have limits (you don't want to run too close to 100% duty cycle nor too much pressure on the injectors).

I seem to remember someone (with some amount of turbo'ing experience) complaining that the injected R1's (or 5PW at least) were a pain to turbo charge as the injectors were too small. It seems we may have found part of the solution...

To give some car related figures for reference my 200SX SR20 had 370cc injectors as standard (and makes 200bhp as standard - this can be upped to probably 300bhp ish on standard injectors). I changed them for 480cc injectors (from memory) from the S15 (JDM only) and ran ~370bhp.

I only intend to run enough boost to get a decent increase in power and not require uprated internals.

I'd be happy with anywhere from 220 to 250bhp. Looking at turbo-r1.net and other peoples experiences I'm hoping this is achievable with just a compression drop (two headgaskets or a single thicker one) and 10psi or less. Hopefully 7 or so.

I do have the option of ignition timing control with my earlier (but better out of the box) PC3R - this may help ward off detonation when on boost etc.

I spoke to someone recently how suggested that a compression drop may not be necessary if keeping the boost low and retarding the ignition on boost. I wonder how that would pan out. Would be ideal as means its a completely stock engine with just bolt on turbo and bigger injectors with a PC3R...

Did consider an aftermarket ECU for more control (but now I'm going waaaay off topic)

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JoaoCaldeira

posted on 23/10/09 at 03:56 PM Reply With Quote
Hi all

They don't state new injectors, but include a new fuel pump and regulator... probably they are raising pressure instead of using new injectors.

As I already have a PCIIIUSB, and as I was thinking about just 5 -7 psi, I thought that current injectors could do, but I'd rather stay on the safe side. At the dollar value, it will be quite inexpensive to buy 4 injectors.
I'm going to the Commet gasket or 2 gaskets to drop compression.
I won't change any engine internals.

As I have the turbo, the main components required are just intercooler and manifold.
I intend to build my own manifold, though that idea may (really) drpo into pieces...

Joćo






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JoaoCaldeira

posted on 23/10/09 at 06:51 PM Reply With Quote
The question was:

The engine currently does around 150 hp, and we are aiming to 200 - 220 hp, so I think the correct ones would be the HDB305F.
These are prices for reconditioned ones, right?

And the answer was:

yes this price is for 1 Reconditioned Injector. new filters, orings, and grommets are included with the injector


-x-x-x-x-x-x-

It looks like prety good value to me.

One thing that remains to be checked is if the fuel circuit is able to feed these injectors...

Joćo






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hobbsy

posted on 23/10/09 at 11:08 PM Reply With Quote
I think the fuel circuit will be man enough (in terms of the rail and lines) for sure.

Whats probably worth doing is if you're using the standard R1 pump replacing it with an uprated item. Walbro do a cheap inline jobbie thats about the same size but will *definitely* flow enough fuel. All its got to do it keep the rail at the desired pressure - any extra goes back down the return line. From memory I went for a 180litre per hour version (the 255litre per hour ones are just overkill as they'll do enough fuel for 500bhp!).

Its tricky whether to know if you could just get away with more pressure and save the expense of the injectors.

I'm away from home so I don't know what the standard fuel pressure is, an adjustable FPR that raises the pressure with boost may still be a good idea as it will follow the boost level. The standard FPR only ever sees a vacuum or an equal pressure (or atmosphere). Will it raise the pressure if it sees boost?

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JoaoCaldeira

posted on 24/10/09 at 08:20 AM Reply With Quote
I'm using a Bosh fuel pump...
I''m going to the garage to look better at the stock furl regulator, but I'm not hopping it having any adjustment / beeing able to deal with boost.

stock pressure is 40 psi, IIRC.

I don't understant the need of a raising fuel pump, due to the fact that the injection map is already changed via PCIII

Joćo






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afj

posted on 24/10/09 at 08:25 AM Reply With Quote
the standard r1 fpr is not rising rate so it just maintains 46ish psi all the time nomatter what rpm/speed/boost, im think all you have to do is fit a rising rate fpr AFTER the standard one, then when the std one blows and the fuel heads back to the tank its stoped by the rising rate one which will be set for 46ish psi off boost rising to 60ish psi on boost, then just map the powercommander to suit.
is this correct? can someone correct me if im wrong?
anyway 12psi boost is going to be 250hp at the flywheel so 6psi im guessing will be close to 200 210hp at the fly??

joao im guessing you need the rising rate as the injecters are not quite man enough at 40psi even with the pc111

[Edited on 24/10/09 by afj]





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hobbsy

posted on 24/10/09 at 02:53 PM Reply With Quote
afj - I think you're confused about what I rising rate regulator is.

I thought all FPR's take a feed from the throttle bodies / plenum (which could be vac or boost) and alter the fuel pressure from the "baseline" pressure set at idle.

What happens with an FPR in forced induction applications is that it raises the fuel pressure by the same amount as the boost it sees from its feed from the plenum. So if std fuel pressure is 40psi and you're running 10psi of boost (pressure over atmospheric) then you'll get 50psi. This is a 1:1 *rate* FPR. (I might be off on the numbers but its the rate theory I'm trying to explain!)

What you also get (often marketed as "power boost valves" is *rising* rate FPR's, the FSE ones are often 1:1.7 (i.e. they raise the fuel pressure at a higher rate than the boost seen). Eg if the boost is 10psi they will raise the fuel pressure by 17psi not 10.

So depending on what you're trying to achieve a rising rate might suit things better (especially if you're running out of duty cycle adjustment in the ECU/PowerCommander).

However clearly it throws the fuel map out quite nicely if you decide to change between the two.

Also I don't think the setup you described would work. You only ever need one FPR (unless you've got two rails or similar!)

The first FPR would restrict the ability of the second one if it was trying to supply a higher pressure etc.

You just whip the old one of the end of the rail and fit the new one. Often you get an adaptor which allows you to remote mount it. And you can even fit a little gauge quite cheaply so you can adjust the base pressure quickly without having to connect a big gauge.

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afj

posted on 24/10/09 at 03:28 PM Reply With Quote
ah didnt realise the yamaha one comes of the rail, thought is was a one piece design thanks





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JoaoCaldeira

posted on 27/10/09 at 10:00 AM Reply With Quote
highjaking my own thread... and what tube diameter will you run from turbo to manifold / intercooler?

Actually, I've been reading too much on detonation, so it will definetly have an intercooler...

Joćo






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hobbsy

posted on 28/10/09 at 01:36 PM Reply With Quote
I haven't really got to the stage where I am determining pipework sizes etc.

I've got a good book at home (Forced Induction by A G Bell) which I'm sure has some guidelines for induction pipework and exhausts vs expected power.

I too would be running some kind of intercooler but due to packaging constraints I may go for a chargecooler instead.

I'm still at the gathering parts stage - I'm not in a major rush to turbo it just yet. Doing some weight saving / better brakes / suspension setup and more practice driving the thing first More power will come last.

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JoaoCaldeira

posted on 28/10/09 at 02:49 PM Reply With Quote
Yeap... not in a hurry too.
It will be 2010 Winter project...
For now I'm just getting used after the crash rebuild.
I've got to have a good book on forced induction. How do you rate that book?

Joćo






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cossiebri

posted on 28/10/09 at 08:29 PM Reply With Quote
I've got a R1 turbo (4xv-carb'd) that now has gsxr1000 throttle bodies on it (very tight fit so should have no probs with them blowing off)have been told the injectors are large enough with a 1.1 fpr. Running stand alone ecu (kms) for the fueling and ign.Using a cosworth fuel pump (will prob replace with a new one as don't know age) for the intercooler was using a rs turbo one as they are a perfect size but now got a pace custom made jobbie, using 50 mm boost pipes also using a boost controller from a vw as it's got a stepper motor for more control(?)should be running around 15 psi but it's capable of 30+ already running JE low comp pistons and carrillo rods so should be strong enough! Not running yet but VERY close (funds permitting of course)Then just got to find the 400 odd quid to get it all mapped, hoping for around 280 bhp
But if not just whack up the boost
in hindsight should have just gone zx12/hayabusa would have been cheaper!









If it doesn't fit MODIFY it!!
Cheers BriF

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hobbsy

posted on 28/10/09 at 11:57 PM Reply With Quote
Yeah but when you're done your engine package incl turbo will weigh less than a zx12 or busa (remember the dry sump etc) and will make more power and a LOT more torque. Plus its more unique! God knows whats happened to my formmating on this posot
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