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Supercharging a non-turbo wagon

Help, Advice, Owners' Discussion and DIY Tutorials on Volvo's stylish, distinctive P2 platform cars sold as model years 2001-2007 (North American market year designations).

2001 - 2007 V70
2001 - 2004 V70 XC (Cross Country)
2004 - 2007 XC70 (Cross Country)
2001 - 2009 S60
2003 - 2007 S60 R
2004 - 2007 V70 R

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zooplane
Posts: 70
Joined: 11 November 2010
Year and Model: V70 2003 N/A
Location: Philadelphia

Supercharging a non-turbo wagon

Post by zooplane »

wondering what things i'd have to meet before going about supercharging my car... I'm tired of going slow...

jda2000
Posts: 584
Joined: 1 April 2010
Year and Model: 04 V70 2.5T 01 V70T5
Location: Sarasota, FL

Post by jda2000 »

expensive proposition and you won't get much hp/torque gain from the mod.

Best bet is to sell the car and get a turbo wagon, then you can tune it for a significant hp/torque gain. :D
Last edited by jda2000 on 01 Apr 2011, 12:41, edited 2 times in total.

precopster
Posts: 7543
Joined: 21 August 2010
Year and Model: Lots
Location: Melbourne Australia
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Post by precopster »

You really don't want an older head gasket in there with the higher boost pressures. Or old O ring seals or old pistons, or old rings, or worn bores, or old stem seals or valve guides/seats. Turbo exhaust valves would be a good idea: http://cgi.ebay.com/ebaymotors/ws/eBayI ... K:MEWAX:IT

Some balanced forged rods would be nice, too.
Someone told me a Supra SC14 supercharger was a very good proposition, and he had fitted one to a N/A RWD car (though I don't know how long it lasted) One may fit where the A/C is on a five??

Best bet is to decide what sort of aspiration you require, start with an engine on a stand, strip it, replace anything worn down, and then decide what compression ratio best suits this setup, choose pistons that suit, then do some hand porting of the head, followed by port matching to manifolds. Water injection setup can help with detonation so while everything is off plumb this into the intake manifold. Of course you'll want to cool the engine oil so why not tap lines into the block to carry coolant hoses to a front mounted oil cooler. Now if you run an auto you'll want a NEW turbo radiator to carry this engine oil cooling.

Of course you'll need some custom guages to keep tabs of boost pressures and the like, perhaps even an engine oil temp guage.

Figure on spending 5-6K and you'll have a really great unique & quick vehicle almost as reliable as a stock factory Volvo car!!
Oh and did I forget to mention that by the time you work out all the engineering requirements and finally build the engine you will spend around one year sourcing all the parts? I don't know how the state laws work where you live but the last time I tried to modify a car I needed an engineer's certificate to state I had competently carried out the modifications so I could insure & register the modified car.
Current cars VW Transporter 2.5TDI, 2010 XC90 D5 R Design

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