Hi,
We are looking into the feasibility of building a turbocharged Fiesta / Focus rally car engine, as i understand it to compete in the 2000cc class a
factor of 1.7 needs to be applied to any forced induction engine.
So, we are limited to 1176cc (or as close as possible)
Also, we need to run a 34mm restrictor on the air intake of the turbo.
I'm thinking of using the 1.25L engine used in the fiesta, (Sigma Zetec-SE) with a smaller bore to get below the cc limit.
With a variable vain turbo, high CR and decent amounts of boost i'm hoping for 220BHP
Any other suggestions / comments?
Cheers Dale
This 1.0 (based on a sleaved 1.2 Vauxhall lump) achieved some impressive figures.
http://www.turbosport.co.uk/showthread.php?t=150737
1.0 litre Ford Ecoboost?
Didn't ford get that sort of figure from the one they used in the formula ford ?
http://www.ford.co.uk/experience-ford/AboutFord/News/VehicleNews/2012/EcoBoost-Nurburgring
[Edited on 6/11/14 by DW100]
There was also a 1.1 16 Valve K series in the Rover 25 around 2002 which is 1117cc. It probably uses the same head as 1.4 /1.6 / 1.8
ecoboost is also tiny so could be moved back or at least rotated rearwards like they used to do in BTCC chassis, to aid weight distribution. ill bet its the lightest option of the FI dinky engines too
seems feesable, i dont think yo have an issue getting that power on the 1.25 sigma,
i run a 1.6 sigma on 1bar off boost that 340bhp @ just shy of 8k
the engines like to rev which is good, stock crank will do 8k, so will rods and pistons in N/A form set of valve springs also needed and it will be
fine
would be cheaper than a 1.0 fox engine at the moment too, although the fox is alot better from the off being a F/I engine to start with
quote:
Originally posted by BaileyPerformance
With a variable vain turbo, high CR and decent amounts of boost i'm hoping for 220BHP
quote:
Originally posted by MikeRJ
quote:
Originally posted by BaileyPerformance
With a variable vain turbo, high CR and decent amounts of boost i'm hoping for 220BHP
That probably won't be very competitive in the 2.0L class. There are plenty of cars making ~300bhp on 2.0L normally aspirated engines, and plenty of 1.6L normally aspirated engines making comparable power.
quote:
Originally posted by DW100
There was also a 1.1 16 Valve K series in the Rover 25 around 2002 which is 1117cc. It probably uses the same head as 1.4 /1.6 / 1.8
quote:
Originally posted by BaileyPerformance
quote:
Originally posted by MikeRJ
quote:
Originally posted by BaileyPerformance
With a variable vain turbo, high CR and decent amounts of boost i'm hoping for 220BHP
That probably won't be very competitive in the 2.0L class. There are plenty of cars making ~300bhp on 2.0L normally aspirated engines, and plenty of 1.6L normally aspirated engines making comparable power.
Maybe, we've mapped several competitive rally cars, the last one was an Escort Mk2 with a vauxhall 16v on Jenveys. It made 210BHP.
Lots of folk claiming 280+ out of a 2.0L red top, most dont achieve it in reality. I would say a good average would be 250BHP.
Really high spec 2.0L engines tend to be peaky, making good power over 6000RPM but not much below 5. I was hoping to bring the mid range up abit with a well sorted turbo engine, to be honest i dont know if it will be competitive, but if the car is light and the engine as all ally and lightweight too it stands a good chance.
I think the new world rally car format is 1600cc turbo, rated at 300BHP from 3000rpm up, that would be nice!!
No definitely a 1.1 16 valve version with multipoint injection in 2002 Rover 25s they also had a ford BC gearbox
quote:
Originally posted by DW100
No definitely a 1.1 16 valve version with multipoint injection in 2002 Rover 25s they also had a ford BC gearbox
A bit left field but Turbo'd R1/GSXR bike engine in a cradle like those made for Mini's (look up Miniexvo and Promotive I think, may be able
to adapt for a Ford Ka) plus an RS turbo LSD with chain drive. Should make about 230hp and be really light and compact and have a 6 speed sequential
box.
Edit also here - FWD R1 Race Conversion Kit
[Edited on 6/11/14 by Ugg10]
quote:
Originally posted by BaileyPerformance
quote:
Originally posted by MikeRJ
quote:
Originally posted by BaileyPerformance
With a variable vain turbo, high CR and decent amounts of boost i'm hoping for 220BHP
That probably won't be very competitive in the 2.0L class. There are plenty of cars making ~300bhp on 2.0L normally aspirated engines, and plenty of 1.6L normally aspirated engines making comparable power.
Maybe, we've mapped several competitive rally cars, the last one was an Escort Mk2 with a vauxhall 16v on Jenveys. It made 210BHP.
Lots of folk claiming 280+ out of a 2.0L red top, most dont achieve it in reality. I would say a good average would be 250BHP.
Really high spec 2.0L engines tend to be peaky, making good power over 6000RPM but not much below 5. I was hoping to bring the mid range up abit with a well sorted turbo engine, to be honest i dont know if it will be competitive, but if the car is light and the engine as all ally and lightweight too it stands a good chance.
I think the new world rally car format is 1600cc turbo, rated at 300BHP from 3000rpm up, that would be nice!!
Mike, agree with everything you said, it is possible to get a good very high power 2.0 engine to be tractable, we did an NA Cosworth YB some years
ago, it made 262bhp, would take full throttle around 2k and pull to 8500.
I think the key to developing a successful race car is to think out of the box, always look at what others do but don't always follow. We've
been involved in Autograss for a while, the first bloke to shove 2 bike engines in car started a trend which people followed.
In theory at least it should be possible to build a small turbo engine with more power at lower rpm then a cammed up 2.0, power to weight should be
better too.
It is a gamble, really hard to say if its worth the development cost.
quote:
Originally posted by BaileyPerformance
I think the key to developing a successful race car is to think out of the box, always look at what others do but don't always follow.
I'd be reading the blur book before committing to any engine change as certain things like turboing engines that aren't factory turboed already can't be done. Also, you can't mix brands of car and engine.
quote:
Originally posted by ste
I'd be reading the blur book before committing to any engine change as certain things like turboing engines that aren't factory turboed already can't be done. Also, you can't mix brands of car and engine.
quote:
Originally posted by onenastyviper
quote:
Originally posted by ste
I'd be reading the blur book before committing to any engine change as certain things like turboing engines that aren't factory turboed already can't be done. Also, you can't mix brands of car and engine.
Assuming you mean the MSA Blue Book ( )
Does the Blue Book really exclude things like that or is that down to the specific technical regulations of the relevant series - which are in addition to the Blue Book?
quote:
Originally posted by onenastyviper
quote:
Originally posted by ste
I'd be reading the blur book before committing to any engine change as certain things like turboing engines that aren't factory turboed already can't be done. Also, you can't mix brands of car and engine.
Assuming you mean the MSA Blue Book ( )
Does the Blue Book really exclude things like that or is that down to the specific technical regulations of the relevant series - which are in addition to the Blue Book?
Mr ugg10,
Twin charging does work, we've done it before, but the issue is the 34mm restrictor, that really limits top end power. So, a small turbo can be
used meaning low lag negating the need for the supercharger.
I don't think the added weight of the blower is worth it, I think the key is small, lightweight and efficient.
If we could run without a restrictor then twin charge with a big turbo would be the way to go, we could see 350bhp out of 1100cc no problem.
quote:
Originally posted by onenastyviper
quote:
Originally posted by ste
I'd be reading the blur book before committing to any engine change as certain things like turboing engines that aren't factory turboed already can't be done. Also, you can't mix brands of car and engine.
Assuming you mean the MSA Blue Book ( )
Does the Blue Book really exclude things like that or is that down to the specific technical regulations of the relevant series - which are in addition to the Blue Book?
Could you get a diesel competitive?
quote:
Originally posted by ettore bugatti
Could you get a diesel competitive?
quote:
Originally posted by ste
I'd be reading the blur book before committing to any engine change as certain things like turboing engines that aren't factory turboed already can't be done. Also, you can't mix brands of car and engine.