Parallel vs. Sequential vs. Compound - Twin Turbo systems explained - Boost School #11

  Переглядів 849,941

driving 4 answers

driving 4 answers

День тому

AEM boost controllers: bit.ly/D4AtruboostX
AEM ECU: bit.ly/D4Ainfinity5
AEM digital racing dash display: bit.ly/D4Acddash
Support d4a: driving-4-answers-shop.fourthw...
In today's episode we're talking about twin turbo setups and we will be doing a detailed explanation and comparison of three different setups. Parallel, sequential and compound twin turbo setups. No, sequential and compound turbo are not the same thing and I will explain how the two differ.
But first, the basics. Why would you ever use two turbos over one? After all a single turbo does the job just fine. It hooks up to the exhaust manifold where it relies on the heat energy of the engine's exhaust to spin up the turbine wheel which is directly connect to the compressor wheel which suck in air compresses it and sends it into the engine to be burned together with the fuel.
But as with most things in life, there's a compromise and that's the turbo size choice. Naturally you would assume that a larger turbo makes more power than a smaller turbo, all other things being equal, and you would be correct. But a larger turbo also needs more heat energy to be spooled up to generate it's maximum boost.
Although it may sound weird a parallel twin turbo setup is in reality very similar to a single turbo setup, just with twice the turbos. You will find parallel turbo setups most often on v6 and v8 engines. A classic and well known example is the twin turbo V6 engine on the Nissan GTR R35.
A parallel turbo features two turbocharger of equal size operating completely independently. This means that each is hooked up to a separate exhaust manifold and each has it's own waste-gate. Exhaust gasses are not diverted from one turbo to the other in any scenario. Each turbo also has it's own intake piping. The intake piping from the two turbos may join before or after the intercooler or it may not join at all, instead each turbo may be feeding a separate intake manifold.
Now when it comes to V6 and V8 engines a parallel setup has many benefits. The first benefit is that dramatically simplified and reduced exhaust piping.
So then why are all the 2jz, RB, LS and other engines which are often used for making big power all running big single turbos and not twin turbos? Well the main reason behind this is that OEMs have incredible R&D capabilities at their disposal and prioritize driveability whereas car enthusiasts do not. What I'm trying to say is that the big single is the easiest setup to get right when chasing big power.
However, twin turbo setups still face the same compromise of the single turbo. While they ease packaging costs and help preserve responsiveness and efficiency by allowing shorter and simpler piping they ultimately can't escape the turbo size choice compromise, they're just splitting it in half.
But a sequential twin turbo setup promises to achieve both, a very low boost threshold and great low rpm performance together with power at the top. Originally invented for the Porsche 959 to get rid of the sudden onslaught of boost present in previous Porsche Turbo models the sequential system gets rid of the compromise by spooling up the turbos in sequence, so one after the other instead of both at the same time.
A common misconception is that a sequential turbo system consists of one small and one large turbo. This doesn't have to be the case and a sequential turbo system can feature two turbos of the same size. What makes a system sequential is not the size of the turbos, but rather the fact that they are spooled and after the other and not at the same time as in the parallel system.
Now this is where all the confusion begins because the terms compound and sequential are often used interchangeably and they're really not interchangeable because not every sequential system is compound but every compound system is sequential.
The way to differentiate between the two is this. In a system that is only sequential we have one turbo spooled before the other but both turbos feed into the intake manifold of the engine. In a sequential compound system one turbo is spooled before the other but one turbo also feeds into the other turbo, and one turbo is always larger than the other. Proper compounding cannot be achieved with two turbos of the same size.
So how does the system work? Well we have two turbos, one small and one large different people will call different turbos primary and secondary so you can largely ignore that distinction. What you have to remember is that the smaller turbo is always the high pressure turbo and the large turbo is always the low pressure turbo and the large turbo always feeds into the smaller turbo.
A special thank you to my patrons:
Daniel
Daniel Morgan
Pepe
Brian Alvarez
Jack H
Dave Westwood
Joe C
Zwoa Meda Beda
Toma Marini
Nelson
#d4a #boostschool #twinturbo
00:00 The problem with singles
03:06 Parallel
09:39 Sequential
15:00 Compound

КОМЕНТАРІ: 1 200
@d4a
@d4a Рік тому
AEM ECU: bit.ly/D4Ainfinity5 AEM digital racing dash display: bit.ly/D4Acddash Patreon: www.patreon.com/d4a Support d4a: driving-4-answers-shop.fourthwall.com/ Versatile: amzn.to/3OpMSRU
@fastinradfordable
@fastinradfordable Рік тому
Thank you. I have twin gt15 turbos I want to setup. But I have real work to do unfortunately. Or fortunately.
@fastinradfordable
@fastinradfordable Рік тому
Now you should do variable turbos. There’s a guy on Tdi club who took a stock 1.9 vw Tdi. Used the stock variable turbo as one of a compound system and had very good results.
@fastinradfordable
@fastinradfordable Рік тому
But I still love you my brother man for whatever you choose to teach us. You are a tremendously amazing friend/teacher. Thank you ❤❤❤❤❤
@johncunningham4820
@johncunningham4820 Рік тому
Excellent , well researched Video . As Usual . You're quite good at this stuff Young Man .
@jonnycash200
@jonnycash200 Рік тому
@@fastinradfordable sweet what do you plan on putting them on
@patrickkelly8095
@patrickkelly8095 Рік тому
As a civil engineer that started out as a mechanical engineer. This guy is phenomenal. His explanations are so engineer processed. Thorough through, and through, step by step, and still technical but not confusing. To me it’s like intellectual crack for my brain.
@endurofan9854
@endurofan9854 Рік тому
and the way he express his ideas are simply profecient, how i would love to go to school once again if the teachers would be same as him
@Monkey80llx
@Monkey80llx Рік тому
Really? So it’s the heat energy from the manifold that spins the turbo, not the air flow/pressure? Hmm, interesting!
@ChiefFalque
@ChiefFalque Рік тому
@@shane888davies6 "even I know heat has nothing to do with it" where do you think the pressure comes from? It's heat. The explosion in the engine primarily generates HEAT, which is deposited primarily in the exhaust gases, which exit the engine at high pressure CAUSED BY the heat. Heat makes stuff move more, which is what generates pressure in matter. You get more pressure with less molecules if the heat is higher. If you reduce the exhaust gases to like 100 degrees celsius, they'll be at a very much lower pressure than when the exact same number of molecules exit the engine. An explosion generates neither matter nor energy - it transforms chemical energy into thermal energy, causing the resulting gas mixture to expand rapidly and violently, pressing on the piston, then exiting the engine in a still compressed and scorching hot pressure wave. In short, the heat is the cause of the actual pressure of the gas. If you ran an intercooler on the exhaust gases of the engine, then into a turbo, you'd lose all the turbo pressure, even in a magical reality where the impedance of flow created by the cooler caused no reduction in gas weight outflow from the engine.
@noisemodule
@noisemodule Рік тому
@Shane888 Davies ooh look, its one of those "tell me you don't understand thermodynamics without..." kinda moments 🗿
@billert_bone5663
@billert_bone5663 Рік тому
Babe wake up D4A posted about turbos
@1992M1L0
@1992M1L0 Рік тому
I LOVE THE DIESEL CONTENT. So hard to find modern, reliable info with this level of technical detail.
@ijustcamefrombiblestudy2243
@ijustcamefrombiblestudy2243 Рік тому
Ever wondered who the creator of this is universe is? I present to you, my God and my Father The Lord God, and my Lord and Saviour Jesus. My life changed forever because of him. God wants to have a relationship with you. He loves you so he didn't spare his own Son Jesus Christ for that reason(John 3:16) that died for your sins. He is not religious. He isn't about religion. He wants a relationship. *Even though you sinned awfully against him and he would have to send you to hell, but he is A God of love as the Bible says.* He wants to be your friend. If you'll accept him. I learnt it that way. We all have our own beliefs and that's why we have to trust the only usable source: the Bible, the Word of God . He didn't put a bunch of rules you have to follow, It was people that did. Those are false. Only way you can come to God is you coming to his Son, Jesus. His only Son died on the cross of Calvary, For YOU. So you may come to God and go to heaven, to be with him. God *focuses on the individual* ,and you are that one today. He loves you so much, He created you, He shaped you, He formed you. Why don't you accept his love today? All you have to do is to come to the cross Ask Jesus for forgiveness by saying you're sorry for your sins. That's where the journey of passing from death to life begins! *He loves us enough to give us a choice: we can ask him to be part of our lives now, and so avoid hell and look forward to enjoying his perfect eternal kingdom, or not.* We Christains need to speak out. If you're a Christian let's speak up for our faith already. We know what is going on in this world is sin, abortion, homosexuality, prosperity gospel... Let's do it brethren already. If you reject Jesus, I am telling you, you will face the biggest amount of punishment in hell, more than murderers, adulterers, liars constantly gossiping, the proud and the wicked. If you reject Christ God cant forgive you of it until you come truly to Christ. Take it seriously, Amen. 10 at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, of those in heaven, and of those on earth, and of those under the earth, and that every tongue should confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, 11 to the glory of God the Father. Philippians 2:10-‬11 NKJV Watch: ukposts.infoRCANXQjDCm8?feature=share
@nomercyinc6783
@nomercyinc6783 Рік тому
looking to youtube from professional shit makes no sense. youtubers arent pioneering anything
@boywhohasl1vedhascometodie469
@boywhohasl1vedhascometodie469 Рік тому
@@nomercyinc6783 they are pioneering how we get information. I learned a lot of stuff about engines, guns, and you name it, easier than I did reading it out of a book. So yes, they are pioneering how we get information, not the information itself.
@MrCleantheEraser
@MrCleantheEraser Рік тому
@@nomercyinc6783 everyone in the automotive world knows that REAL insightful information comes from experience. It’s also common knowledge that wherever you go for information you’ll have to wade through bullshit before you find what you’re looking for. UKposts is nothing more than documented experience in an easy-to-find format. I’d say you’re the one behind by not using every resource and reference tool that you have. Hanes manual open in front of me, I still UKposts almost everything just for that one piece of insightful information that makes the entire job less of a headache.
@einhase6924
@einhase6924 Рік тому
@@nomercyinc6783 You don´t know 2stroke stuffing
@ferid9k
@ferid9k Рік тому
Video suggestion: guide to tire dimensions and their effect on grip& performance.Many youtubers will simply say wider tire=more rubber contacting the ground which means more friction and grip.But friction doesn't depend on the contact area because a smaller area will have more pressure and a bigger one will have less,so the overall friction will be the same for both considering mass of the vehicle doesn't change.I would like to hear an explanation from you
@d4a
@d4a Рік тому
I'll do a video on something like that, because the same thing applies to bigger brakes too.
@damncritics
@damncritics Рік тому
Your explanation is totally incorrect. For pneumatic rubber tyres, friction is absolutely 100% dependent on the size of the contact patch. For very complicated reasons, as the shear stress acting on a tyre increases, the coefficient of friction drops. Increasing the tyre size reduces the amount of shear stress a tyre expriences and therefore increases grip. For the exact same reason this occurs, a heavier car will have less performance than a slower car given equal tyre sizes. It is also the basis of many aspects of chassis tuning (e.g. making the rear suspension stiffer will increase the grip on the front and vice versa). There are a bunch of free resources online for you to learn about this phenomenon but I recommend watching this video (ukposts.info/have/v-deo/momhZqytjJ120nk.html) on general vehicle dynamics. The information you're looking for is at 52:55 or so, but I highly, highly recommend watching the whole thing if you're the least bit interested in this sort of thing. It's super dense and well explained, and while it's not 100% correct, it'll give you a rough idea on what to look out for if you wanna do some further reading on your own.
@yash_kambli
@yash_kambli Рік тому
u r right, friction indeed only depends upon weight and coeff. Of friction and not on contact area however key here is there must be direct contact between surface and tyre which is not always possible. sand, debris and other things present on the road could easily break the contact and so does the friction. wider tyres increases the probability of a direct contact over broad spectrum compare to skinner tyres.
@petrolheadJJ
@petrolheadJJ Рік тому
You are oversimpilying one of the most complicated aspects of vehicle dynamics. Whole books have been written about tyres.
@ferid9k
@ferid9k Рік тому
@@petrolheadJJ Dude I know friction of a tire definetly depends on its width and I didn't simplify anything about tires,read my comment again.What was in my mind was a solid block sliding across a surface.Anyways all I want is to understand how this complex phenomenon works
@mattmorrison6958
@mattmorrison6958 Рік тому
Really like that you mentioned cylinder mixing/interference being better avoided in some configurations for turbo response and engine efficiency. I would argue that is a large factor that many people skip over when looking at mid/low rpm power/spool differences
@ijustcamefrombiblestudy2243
@ijustcamefrombiblestudy2243 Рік тому
@Matt Morison Ever wondered who the creator of this is universe is? I present to you, my God and my Father The Lord God, and my Lord and Saviour Jesus. My life changed forever because of him. God wants to have a relationship with you. He loves you so he didn't spare his own Son Jesus Christ for that reason(John 3:16) that died for your sins. He is not religious. He isn't about religion. He wants a relationship. *Even though you sinned awfully against him and he would have to send you to hell, but he is A God of love as the Bible says.* He wants to be your friend. If you'll accept him. I learnt it that way. We all have our own beliefs and that's why we have to trust the only usable source: the Bible, the Word of God . He didn't put a bunch of rules you have to follow, It was people that did. Those are false. Only way you can come to God is you coming to his Son, Jesus. His only Son died on the cross of Calvary, For YOU. So you may come to God and go to heaven, to be with him. God *focuses on the individual* ,and you are that one today. He loves you so much, He created you, He shaped you, He formed you. Why don't you accept his love today? All you have to do is to come to the cross Ask Jesus for forgiveness by saying you're sorry for your sins. That's where the journey of passing from death to life begins! *He loves us enough to give us a choice: we can ask him to be part of our lives now, and so avoid hell and look forward to enjoying his perfect eternal kingdom, or not.* We Christains need to speak out. If you're a Christian let's speak up for our faith already. We know what is going on in this world is sin, abortion, homosexuality, prosperity gospel... Let's do it brethren already. If you reject Jesus, I am telling you, you will face the biggest amount of punishment in hell, more than murderers, adulterers, liars constantly gossiping, the proud and the wicked. If you reject Christ God cant forgive you of it until you come truly to Christ. Take it seriously, Amen. 10 at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, of those in heaven, and of those on earth, and of those under the earth, and that every tongue should confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, 11 to the glory of God the Father. Philippians 2:10-‬11 NKJV Watch: ukposts.infoRCANXQjDCm8?feature=share
@jonowichert787
@jonowichert787 Рік тому
Would be good to see the twinscroll/single scroll differences highlighted. As far as setups go, it's an interesting middle ground.
@mattmorrison6958
@mattmorrison6958 Рік тому
@@jonowichert787 We've seen reducing cylinder to cylinder mixing (more pronounced with longer duration/overlap camshafts) being one of the larger factors in why a divided setup acts like a larger engine in the earlier rpm range, and also interestingly, a parallel turbo inline 6 with the front 3 to one single scroll turbo and rear 3 to another single scroll turbo has the same beneficial effect of reducing cylinder mixing as a divided setup. Probably better from the engine's view since there isn't any possibility of cross talk across the divider in the turbine housing, and have seen that it doesn't take much of a path (like a single wastegate divided setup that isn't divided all the way up to the wastegate valve face) in order to make a divided setup act more like an open setup and lose much of the spool/response/VE gains
@rocklobstar5672
@rocklobstar5672 Рік тому
I'm a huge car guy and also big into physics and I like this channel a lot because it gives me the fundemental detail I'm looking for. Love the comments the discussions and the overall community here.
@huntleysheep4787
@huntleysheep4787 29 днів тому
how are you big into physics ts is too hard
@k1ll3rvc
@k1ll3rvc Рік тому
interesting note on compound turbo setups, you can do it using the same size turbos, but you need 3 of them; 2 to act as low pressure turbo, 1 to act as high pressure.
@Dave-dh7rt
@Dave-dh7rt Рік тому
Interesting!!!
@DaniloMarkovic-jz5pk
@DaniloMarkovic-jz5pk Рік тому
Yup, cuz best sizing is to low boost turbo is twice size of high boost turbo....
@austinpeterson4898
@austinpeterson4898 Рік тому
I know a guy with a triple turbo Cummins. It’s fucking rowdy.
@Jacob-W-5570
@Jacob-W-5570 Рік тому
in case of an L6 can you have each turbo fed by two cylinders?
@DaniloMarkovic-jz5pk
@DaniloMarkovic-jz5pk Рік тому
@@Jacob-W-5570 too complicated for parrallel and not efficient for sequentials or compund
@blauwzakjecrack
@blauwzakjecrack Рік тому
Frikking love it how you explain things!A perfect learning curve from simple into more complex examples,no unnecessary bs or dumb jokes and no ego sauce either! Thank you
@markchapman2585
@markchapman2585 Рік тому
@driving4answer @TELEGRAM TO CLAIM PRIZE fucking scammers
@LifeInJambles
@LifeInJambles Рік тому
....... but I like dumb jokes, and he makes them from time to time.
@SuperScottie3000
@SuperScottie3000 Рік тому
Loved the video! I’d love to see one now on “twin charging” or using both a supercharger and a turbocharger.
@NLBassist
@NLBassist Рік тому
I am an educated car guy, but I still learn. And you help me to tell people such things in a quite easy way. Thanks!
@adrianscatton8665
@adrianscatton8665 Рік тому
That's the idea that being able to relate an idea to a layperson is the final step of fully understanding it yourself. I love it. This guy has a particular talent for it.
@scarletboa
@scarletboa Рік тому
Another awesome video from D4A! I always learn something new from your videos. Congrats on 500k subscribers! You've earned it! You'll hit 1 million in no time if you just keep up the good work. Thank you for keeping your content efficient and to the point, without fluff, filler or excessive ads
@Timbalo0
@Timbalo0 Рік тому
As someone who works as a diesel engine developer, I love the way you explain this topic. The only thing you're kind of missing (propably due to not confuse the heck out of your viewers LOL) is that modern compound setups use a bypass valve for the high pressure compressor, which will "turn off" the high pressure turbo at high pressure ratios, making the system practically function as a single stage turbo only (the low pressure turbo).
@niklas5855
@niklas5855 6 днів тому
But why? Isn't compounding good since it gives much more boost pressure?
@SigEpVet
@SigEpVet Рік тому
Excellent break down of how both turbo systems in general work, and how the difference between the various combinations of multi-turbo systems work!
@diyonfonseka3435
@diyonfonseka3435 Рік тому
The way that you explained this video is truly amazing, the way it was described so simply yet so detailed is beyond amazing. Thank you Mr D4A
@yevgeniyprotsenko9500
@yevgeniyprotsenko9500 Рік тому
It's a scam
@ghostwrench2292
@ghostwrench2292 Рік тому
Great video as always! I feel like I have a good understanding of single and twin turbos but sequential and especially compound turbos, I did not understand as well. I always thought the smaller turbo in a compound set-up fed the larger turbo. I did not realize that a smaller turbo can still increase boost from a larger turbo feeding it. Thanks again for the video!
@chriss6154
@chriss6154 Рік тому
Ghost your not alone bud. I used to work on jet engines and was right with you on that compound thought I thought smaller woke up quick and fed the larger already compressed air waking it's ass up with fury but then I would think the smaller being the only thing the larger has to breath through it would choke as it woke up and although I kinda see his point I'm still confused on the compound theory and have so many more goddam questions lol.
@sntslilhlpr6601
@sntslilhlpr6601 Рік тому
@@chriss6154 I think it's easy to envision these things as "blowing" air (hence the supercharger nickname of "blower") but really what they're doing is compressing it. In other words, it's not like a bathroom exhaust fan that just pushes air along a pipe, these things are actually grabbing air and squeezing it into a smaller space in order to create boost. That's why they create so much heat. The exhaust fan might have some difference in pressure between the intake and exhaust but if you try to actually run it fast enough to create boost it'll stall and choke itself and won't move much air at all. I think jet engines are actually a good example of compound boost. Most of them have two stages with the first one having larger diameter compressor blades that lead to a second stage with smaller blades and an increasingly smaller throat for the air to flow through. Gotta admit, I thought I had a decent understanding of these things but it wasn't until watching this vid and reading your comment that it all clicked. I think part of the problem of being a petrolhead is you don't get exposed to diesel stuff, and diesel and jet fuel are pretty much the same stuff so it's pretty much the same concept, it's just one's purely axial while the other has a reciprocating engine in between all the boost-creating devices lol. Kinda reminds me of people making jet engines out of old turbochargers haha. Also for some reason reminds me of Scott Manley's vid on supersonic wind tunnels and how they work. /watch?v=v0Z_4VyuzcA
@chiefdenis
@chiefdenis Рік тому
This is why i love this channel, he just made the idea much clearer than i had thought
@vffa
@vffa Рік тому
Same. I realized that my D5 Volvo doesn't have a normal sequential turbo, but a compound turbo.
@dustinbrueggemann1875
@dustinbrueggemann1875 6 місяців тому
@@chriss6154 The trick is to remember that air has mass, and that mass is what we're actually worried about. Only the outermost point in the system can actually bring MORE mass to the system, so the outermost has to be the big one in order to bring more mass in. Once we're inside the system, we cannot grab more mass, only cram it closer together, so we must get smaller as we go deeper into the system.
@c.a.r.s.carsandrelevantspecs
@c.a.r.s.carsandrelevantspecs Рік тому
This was another excellent video! Boost School is one of my favorite D4A video series! I would love to see a future video entirely about the effects of heat (pros and cons) within a turbo system--especially how it relates to producing boost. Thanks so much, and keep up the excellent work!
@yevgeniyprotsenko9500
@yevgeniyprotsenko9500 Рік тому
This is a scam
@288gto7
@288gto7 Рік тому
FIAT/Lancia triflux was also an inline 4 with radial valve setup that had parallen twin turbos each located on the opposite sides of the engine. There was both intake and exhaust on both sides of the engine due to the radial valve setup effectively "turning the inline 4 into a v8" as far as intake and exhaust piping goes
@tbkriley
@tbkriley Рік тому
You're partially right, it got the name tri-flux because it's frontal silhouette looked kinda like a Y. It had 3 areas for intake/exhaust, 2 for exhaust (sides) and 1 for intake (on top).
@288gto7
@288gto7 Рік тому
@@tbkriley yes i worded it wrong. By intake being on both sides i meant it being on each side of the head due to the radial/cross valve setup. The intake manifold itself feeds from the top as you said. Which is pretty close to a v engine with top intake manifold and exhaust manifolds on each sides
@CosineHyperbolic
@CosineHyperbolic Рік тому
Absolutely awesome video, as usual. One thing I'd like to see everyone - not just you - embrace though, is clearly stating "peak power" instead of "power"; because - for example at 7:38 - two setups with "the same power" probably only make the same *peak* power, but one has greater area under the power curve overall (e.g. higher power at some RPM that isn't the peak), meaning it actually makes more power overall- many people don't seem to realize that's a thing.
@dmeemd7787
@dmeemd7787 Рік тому
This channel is INCREDIBLY good.. worked a lot w/ all kinds of race cars, alcohol funny cars top fuel, sprint cars, tractor pulling, etc.. I'm not saying I'm a master of all these things but what I am saying is I still learn a lot and to have experience in these things, and I can still tell you for whatever it's worth, that this channel is incredibly, INCREDIBLY good, probably one of the best! Another thing I love is that there is no way you are not getting people for getting people into learning and critical thinking, as well as getting them into stuff like racing, fixing their own cars and so on, awesome, awesome stuff! 🤘🏻
@CopyMSaka
@CopyMSaka 8 місяців тому
Man the fact that I was totally focused throughout the whole vid makes me feel like a liar when I don't focus on studying
@masterjack8222
@masterjack8222 Рік тому
I just finished your boost school playlist this morning, and i dont have to wait for the next episode haha
@Flies2FLL
@Flies2FLL Рік тому
Interesting fact about compound turbo systems: In these, the air reaches the bigger turbo first, as he said. But the smaller turbo actually spools up first. What that means is that the small turbo can actually suck air through the big turbo in order to get boost going in a hurry. Great video!
@d4a
@d4a Рік тому
I actually said all that in the video
@Flies2FLL
@Flies2FLL Рік тому
@@d4a Sorry, got called away before the end. Great video as always!
@w8stral
@w8stral Рік тому
His description was good, but his definitions... need work. His compound turbo is sequential, not compound as compound turbos are tied directly to the crank shaft, otherwise it was well done.
@Flies2FLL
@Flies2FLL Рік тому
@@w8stral You are thinking about the turbo compound engine, not the compound turbo. This was a series of radial aircraft engines built by Curtis-Wright called the R-3350 which featured "blow down turbines", which added power to the crank via a fluid coupling. They were tricky to operate, and I'm pretty sure this was the only production engine of this type. A compound turbo the way I've always understood it is more than one turbo mounted in series so that one blows into the other. The turbos are different sizes so that one spools quickly, while the other handles the large amounts of air necessary at high rpm. They supercharge the engine, not directly add power to the crankshaft. Yes, his verbiage is sometimes odd. To his credit, English isn't his first language so he gets a little bit of a pass...
@JazzbLu
@JazzbLu Рік тому
Very cool. I didn't really know about sequencial turbo set-ups. And the details to distinguish the different set-ups are undeniable. Thank you for another very thorough and amazing video!
@caleb875
@caleb875 Рік тому
i really respect and look up to you man. "get lost and you shall find what you are looking for" was beautiful
@d4a
@d4a Рік тому
Thank you so much, I'm honored
@text5425
@text5425 Рік тому
Thanks for watching and commenting❤️ you have been randomly selected from comments as winner of today’s giveaway hit me up via the digits above to claim prize......🎁🎁
@kurtbennett1164
@kurtbennett1164 Рік тому
Dude....friggin AWESOME explanation and graphics! Loved it!
@ahnafzahid9450
@ahnafzahid9450 Рік тому
Glad to see u come back with another Boost School😍😍
@Flacooo
@Flacooo Рік тому
This has got to be my favourite UKposts channel, I was LITERALLY thinking about this today at work and you answered everything + some
@text5425
@text5425 Рік тому
Thanks for watching and commenting❤️ you have been randomly selected from comments as winner of today’s giveaway hit me up via the digits above to claim prize.......🎁🎁
@TheRoulette77
@TheRoulette77 Рік тому
thank you AEM for supporting this channel!!! and thanks D4 another great vid bud!
@El_Chompo
@El_Chompo Рік тому
instead of mufflers just keep adding compound turbos until every last bit of exhaust energy is captured!
@d4a
@d4a Рік тому
🤣🤣
@igornoga5362
@igornoga5362 Рік тому
This also solves emissions since a particle with no energy cannot move. Genius!
@El_Chompo
@El_Chompo Рік тому
@@d4a I wrote a big long reply and lost it RIP. But I was basically saying that jet engines are like turbos but with a lot of compound stages which makes them way more efficient. I'm thinking 5 turbos would be a good starting point to experiment with. Primary turbo would be normal size to match the engine, second would be 12% larger, third would be 24% larger, fourth would be 50% larger, and the final one would be 100% larger than the primary, just like the normal final stage compound turbo size. I want to find some CFD software to model this and see how well it might work. The plumbing would be a nightmare, it's too bad they don't make axial flow turbos, but at that point it's pretty much a jet engine eh? I mean honestly, with 5 turbos and a straight through turbo style muffler and resonator I think the car would be pretty quiet, and theoretically should be much more efficient than just 1 turbo (or turbine stage).
@El_Chompo
@El_Chompo Рік тому
@@igornoga5362 Actually you just gave me another genius idea! Make the hot side turbine blades out of cat material so you actually get 5 stages of CAT turbos that would probably make a decent improvement on the emissions. It might be tough though to make a blade out of cat material that is still strong enough to be a hot side turbine.
@Element4ry
@Element4ry Рік тому
Thank you D4A! Excellent work on the video! The way you explain how things work is amazing!
@text5425
@text5425 Рік тому
Thanks for watching and commenting❤️ you have been randomly selected from comments as winner of today’s giveaway hit me up via the digits above to claim prize.... 🎁🎁
@yevgeniyprotsenko9500
@yevgeniyprotsenko9500 Рік тому
This is a scam
@nasegundafeira
@nasegundafeira Рік тому
Awesome explanation, thanks for sharing it! =) In Brazil we had a tuner that made one EA211 1.0 three cylinder engine with compound system... peak pressure was above 3.0 bar and the engine developed 250+ HP on 100% ethanol fuel. Other setups with just one bigger turbo could reach 200+ HP but sacrificed the low-end RPM (spooling just over 3k RPM), which is extremely critical for such tiny engine. It was a complex but beautiful design.
@waltwimer2551
@waltwimer2551 Рік тому
Another brilliantly produced and presented video! Fantastic and very accessible information here, as always. Great integration of graphics, photos, and constituent videos!
@deanosslewis
@deanosslewis Рік тому
Another good one. Love to see one about twin scroll turbo systems
@Stiletto6inch
@Stiletto6inch Рік тому
Great content and explanation as usual.Thanks!
@beyondee
@beyondee Рік тому
got recommended here for some reason, stuck till the end. clear and good explanation, keep it up dude
@MikeF055
@MikeF055 Рік тому
Great presentation-I thought compound turbo's worked opposite of what you said. But now that you showed how they work-it makes sense. Thanks for your video!
@Objectional_Opinion
@Objectional_Opinion Рік тому
This is phenomenal. Not sure if this is talent or honed skill, but you are great at teaching.
@behroozkhaleghirad
@behroozkhaleghirad Рік тому
I'm a Diesel mechanic from Iran. I have never worked on anything remotely "advanced", because they don't exist in our country or at least are not frequent. But I always had a theory: if small turbo --> lower RPM activation + lower boost and large turbo --> higher RPM activation + higher boost, why we don't invent a system that I call "a turbo for a turbo". It works in a way that we put a tiny and very sensitive turbo that will spin immediately with the lowest amount of exhaust gas before a larger main turbo. That small turbo won't feed the compressor side of larger turbo, but the exhaust side of larger turbo. The large turbo will suck the air from air filter in traditional way. The exhaust side of larger turbo will be also fed by exhaust manifold. There will be a shut-off gates before exhaust sides of both turbos. This system will work this way: we step on fuel pedal, engine revs slightly, small turbo goes crazy and will feed the larger turbo with high air pressure (the exhaust manifold that feeds the same spot in larger turbo is closed now to prevent back pressure) so that it starts to spin before the engine would spin it at normal conditions. Now that the large turbo is kicking in and exhaust pressure is going up, the exhaust manifold that leads to small turbo will be shut (to prevent the turbo from exploding) and the valve before the exhaust side of big turbo will open and big turbo which has enough speed now will be fed by the exhaust fumes as it was intended. But there will be no lag, because the big turbo is already spinning. Please let me know what you all think about this
@giggiddy
@giggiddy Рік тому
Behrooz- Well done my friend and greetings from the US. I had to draw out your plan so I can grasp it but it sure sounds like it checks all the boxes. I've often had similar thoughts but wondered about using maybe a very small electrically powered micro turbo to produce the boost for the larger turbo just as you described. I always wished I had the money to have a small shop and work with someone like yourself to test these ideas. I could work for hours on ideas like that.. Oh well, until then.. Take care my friend.
@AlexanderBurgers
@AlexanderBurgers Рік тому
you're missing one important piece, this setup doesn't actually add any extra energy to the exhaust stream to spool the second turbo. You need to burn fuel for that to happen, and inside the engine is generally the best place for that. Which turns the idea back into a regular compound turbo setup. :)
@behroozkhaleghirad
@behroozkhaleghirad Рік тому
@@giggiddy thanks man. It makes me happy to see people like you, curious and dedicated to their ideas. I'm poor, here in Iran I only make 150 USD per month. I can't afford to test any of my ideas. Currently I'm applying for University in Canada for Neuroscience Masters. If I make it, I plan to become a Neuroscientist, make money and then attack automotive world with free hand and mind. Wish me luck. You too stay safe and curious.
@ricepony33
@ricepony33 Рік тому
You would need full control of the valves/gates, perhaps you could use a fancy electronic wastegate like the new turbo smart one to control the transition.
@behroozkhaleghirad
@behroozkhaleghirad Рік тому
@@AlexanderBurgers I don't intend to add any more energy to the system. This is a solution to reduce lag for big turbo engines.
@danz1910
@danz1910 Рік тому
another great turbo video. Had no idea a compound system was working this way. I've always had at least 1 turbo car since the last 20 years. I just love em.
@phoenixlee3180
@phoenixlee3180 Рік тому
Thank you so much for posting this! I'm a university student taking part in Formula SAE and learning about engines, turbos, whatnot is truly exciting stuff! Hopefully, I can contribute to the team with this knowledge soon enough! Cheers!
@thatsdaniellelol
@thatsdaniellelol Рік тому
Wow!! I had no idea you can route twin turbo applications in different ways! Thank You so much for this video!!!
@midi510
@midi510 Рік тому
The (tier IV) diesel engines in the snowcats I work on have variable geometry turbos. They change the internal dimensions of the compressor depending on the required boost. It's a high tech alternative to waste gates. You should do a video on them if you haven't already.
@nthgth
@nthgth Рік тому
I think I remember Car and Driver magazine talking about Porsche using those in the 911 a few years ago too. Interesting stuff.
@no-damn-alias
@no-damn-alias Рік тому
a 1994 TDi with 110hp has this. Nothing new
@Tallnerdyguy
@Tallnerdyguy Рік тому
@nthgth ya, Porsche designed them and it changed a lot of the engineering behind them. But they are expensive, complex and are designed for a specific engine. And can't really be modified out of spec
@tomy8339
@tomy8339 Рік тому
Hell yes!!! I've been waiting for you to do a turbo video like this. I can't watch yet as I'm at work, looking so forward to watching.
@E.IS.M.I.A.
@E.IS.M.I.A. Рік тому
I know nearly nothing when it comes to cars but it has always fascinated me, I love these videos
@Fast_Cabbage
@Fast_Cabbage Рік тому
Really great video!! Was watching some of the boost school last night and had to watch when I saw this posted! Thank you and have an awesome day D4A!
@NullVoidNA
@NullVoidNA Рік тому
The details of this topic has eluded me for a very long time. You spell things out so clearly. Thank you.
@telegrammewhistlindiesel4210
@telegrammewhistlindiesel4210 Рік тому
👆👆👆
@yevgeniyprotsenko9500
@yevgeniyprotsenko9500 Рік тому
Iam a diesel technician and I work with this systems all the time. Really enjoyed this video. Thank you
@andersemanuel
@andersemanuel Рік тому
Thank you! So interesting. I just love learning all this stuff. Maybe one day I can build something cool :)
@eTiMaGo
@eTiMaGo Рік тому
As usual, a video that has blown me away :D
@d4a
@d4a Рік тому
I can sleep now, thank you
@Pedroppl1
@Pedroppl1 Рік тому
This is the best turbo explanation ever! The quality of the video and the explanation is so high that I can't believe I'm watching this for free
@Med1na2012
@Med1na2012 6 місяців тому
Best easiest most detailed explanation have ever found!! You really know your stuff bro! No complicated terminology just straight forward love it! Liked subscribed n shared! When I want to build my s15 your going to be my go too guy brother ❤
@R4baDader
@R4baDader Рік тому
Compound charging was fairly common in WW2 aircraft engines, but was typically used with centrifugal superchargers rather than proper turbos for most engines and aircraft, save for the P-47
@jiroyamamoto2878
@jiroyamamoto2878 5 місяців тому
Both the P-47 and the P-38 used superchargers and turbosuperchargers in a sequential set up.
@jamesjohnson1638
@jamesjohnson1638 23 дні тому
That's not really a compound turbo setup, that's generally referred to as twincharging.
@JK061996
@JK061996 Рік тому
Fun fact, the 2nd-gen Saab 9-3 was available with a twin-turbo diesel I4 and a single-turbo gasoline V6 (the turbine was fed by a single bank but the compressor acted on both) Edit: the asymmetrical V6 turbo was actually the 3.0 used on the 1st-gen 9-5
@Flies2FLL
@Flies2FLL Рік тому
I believe these 54 degree V engines used very low boost. Low boost turbocharged engines actually gain fuel efficiency due to the increased compression. It's funny you brought that car up because I was just thinking of these when I read your comment.
@devandrasimanjuntak1646
@devandrasimanjuntak1646 Рік тому
@@Flies2FLL wasn’t SAAB one of the first manufacturers that turbocharged their cars for fuel efficiency instead of power?
@blendpinexus1416
@blendpinexus1416 Рік тому
@J M when i eventually get my hands on a 240z i'll drop an i5 turbo engine and awd drivetrain. just about every manufacturer that made a sporty i5 engine made them REALLY good.
@Flies2FLL
@Flies2FLL Рік тому
@@devandrasimanjuntak1646 I think it was for power. The V6 cars used an Opel engine.
@Flies2FLL
@Flies2FLL Рік тому
@J M The SAAB four cylinder engine was actually a British design from Triumph. SAAB made it reliable by redesigning the cylinder head. The GM 3.8 liter V6 was not a Chevy engine, it was a Buick engine that actually started life as a 3.5 liter V8, was bought by Rover, and then repurchased by GM and cut down into a V6. But I agree with you on SAAB longevity; If you keep oil in them they run forever.
@SoylentGamer
@SoylentGamer Рік тому
7:30 This reminds me of this RCR video on a Subaru Impreza with a single turbo 2JZ swap. IT WAS A MESS TO DRIVE, they were struggling to get the turbo going on the street. He described it as "If a can of Four Loko were a car"
@jeremywillard2374
@jeremywillard2374 8 днів тому
Most descriptive video on turbos I've ever seen. Answered every question I had
@RageDavis
@RageDavis Рік тому
Great video, but a tiny mistake @ min 17: Having different diameters when comparing the outlet of turbo 1 and the inlet of turbo 2 does not cause a changing volume in the pipe connecting them, as a given pipe does not change its volume. However, a change in diameter in the piping will result in a change of the pressure inside: increasing the diameter decreases the pressure when comparing before and after the expansion. This results in wasting some of the energy, the first turbo had transferred into the compressed air, in other words: a loss of efficiency. Vice versa, decreasing the diameter in the piping will result in a increased pressure in that part of the piping behind said restriction at the cost of loosing efficiency on the first turbo: it has to work harder. Basically, the result stays the same: loss of efficiency due to mismatched sizing of the turbo chargers. But from an engineering point of view, the difference matters: in this application, we are talking about flowing fluids (compressed air), which are in the realm of Bernulli´s law and the Navier-Stokes equation. Interesting side fact: in the aircraft engines of WW2, there were several stages of compression (e.g. combination of turbo and supercharging) in series. Since it is more efficient to compress colder air, there were cooling stages after each compression stage. Funny thing: the cooling in between the compression stages was defined as "intercooling", whilst the cooling behind the last stage of compession was called "aftercooling". Therefore, the term "intercooling" is actually use in a wrong fashion when it comes to cars: no matter what combination of chargers are used in cars, in almost all cases, the cooling of the air only happens behind the last compression stage before entering the inlet valves of the piston engine. Therefore using the expression "intercooler" when it comes to cars, is actually wrong: it is always aftercooling.
@leoarc1061
@leoarc1061 Рік тому
There are automotive examples of it. The Lancia Delta S4 used a series configuration (turbo to supercharger) with an intercooler after each stage.
@RageDavis
@RageDavis Рік тому
@@leoarc1061 "...no matter what combination of chargers are used in cars, in almost all cases, the cooling of the air only happens behind the last compression stage before entering the inlet valves of the piston engine." Plus, the Delta S4 as one of the most powerful Group B vehicles can hardly be called a regular car - or have you seen a Champcar cruising along the streets lately? ;)
@leoarc1061
@leoarc1061 Рік тому
@@RageDavis I wasn't negatively criticizing your input. Simply adding to it. You are correct. Terms like "intercooling" and "aftercooling" are often misused. In regards to the Delta S4, what is your opinion on its configuration? Could've Lancia done better with turbochargers alone? Or, could've a centrifugal supercharger been a better option than the roots?
@mayuravirus6134
@mayuravirus6134 Рік тому
The thing about Turbo is that the bigger the turbo is the laggier it gets and the placement of it can significantly either response fast or too slow sometimes the weirdest one i've seen is Nissan Z with turbo on the back
@d4a
@d4a Рік тому
The turbo on the back engine in the front stuff is honestly a bit of a stupid trend..very little benefits and many downsides on that one.
@THE_EXPERIMENTER
@THE_EXPERIMENTER Рік тому
Thank you for this. You deserve waaaaay more subs dude. I learn something new every time I watch one of your videos!
@euphoric5172
@euphoric5172 Рік тому
I have always been confused about compund turbo systems but you explained it very well and it all makes sense now, thanks.
@text5425
@text5425 Рік тому
Thanks for watching and commenting❤️ you have been randomly selected from comments as winner of today’s giveaway hit me up via the digits above to claim prize.......🎁🎁
@Cam.Klingon
@Cam.Klingon Рік тому
What about a VNT or superchargers driving turbo's?
@dvavra
@dvavra Рік тому
Would love to see your take on "hot vee" engines, (i.e. advantages, packaging & examples).
@ssvis2
@ssvis2 Рік тому
Excellent video and really interesting. And this is how to do sponsorships! It's actually relevant to the content and you tied it in at appropriate points to show how the sponsor's products can be used in context. Keep up the great work!
@jjarman009
@jjarman009 Рік тому
Love the content, thanks! Definitely among the best information available. I just wish the boost school videos could be more frequent.
@yash_kambli
@yash_kambli Рік тому
Can u explain about Crank offset? I've a bit confussed over its actual usage. Some says it reduces the vibrations while others expressing how it increases the effectiveness of the power stroke. It's also have been Heard that it gives more freedom to set valve timing since piston spend more time in BDC and TDC.
@fastinradfordable
@fastinradfordable Рік тому
Nothing can make an engine ‘spend more time at tdc
@ethanvink1710
@ethanvink1710 Рік тому
Twin charged engines are kinda cool too, and although not entirely practical, I might twin charge my car in the future 😁
@peekaboo1575
@peekaboo1575 Рік тому
The Delta S4 used twin-charging to have anti-lag before anti lag was really a thing.
@a1phamalestud
@a1phamalestud Рік тому
Screw practicality that would be dope to see you build a twin charged car
@mabu1760
@mabu1760 Рік тому
YT suggestions are sometimes good: you're good! I saw some of your videos today and I'll be watching more. Thanks for the great quality, keep it up.
@livingon2wheels
@livingon2wheels Рік тому
WOW. So much information in a single video. This is fantastic content and he is an excellent educator. I'm a huge fan of turbos!
@ricepony33
@ricepony33 Рік тому
Compound Question? Is there any benefit to intercooling the air after it leaves the large turbo to reduce the inlet temps on the small turbo? Basically two intercoolers.
@mattmorrison6958
@mattmorrison6958 Рік тому
Pretty sure this is where the term intercooler came from since technically most setups are an "aftercooler"
@w.7474
@w.7474 Рік тому
I'm guilty for not studying math but studying on how turbos work
@dmitri546
@dmitri546 16 днів тому
Time well spent
@R0cketRed
@R0cketRed Рік тому
He's BACK! Great to see another educational video on performance mods. 👏 missed these!
@text5425
@text5425 Рік тому
Thanks for watching and commenting❤️ you have been randomly selected from comments as winner of today’s giveaway hit me up via the digits above to claim prize.......🎁🎁
@fuse8052
@fuse8052 Рік тому
Learned a lot from this super informative video. This answers a lot of questions and confusions I have had about these setups.
@Shomare100
@Shomare100 Рік тому
What about compound turbos vs superchargers for diesels?
@johnnymac1976
@johnnymac1976 Рік тому
A med/large centrifugal supercharger blowing into a small/medium turbo in a compound setup would give a unique dynamic. You may have to put a wastegate on the supercharger's output to limit boost during higher rpm throttle/load transients to limit boost spikes and potential surge on the supercharger.
@Shomare100
@Shomare100 Рік тому
@@johnnymac1976 I like that idea
@DaDaDo661
@DaDaDo661 Рік тому
Let's say your girlfriend left you...AEM infinity can handle all of that and more
@nobenznofun9139
@nobenznofun9139 Рік тому
Best explanation of this topic!!! I never properly understood up until seeing this
@dantesmith3664
@dantesmith3664 Рік тому
wow, this is much more in-depth than i first suspected. nice job doing your homework. thanks man
@adanthedriver1982
@adanthedriver1982 Рік тому
Great topic, great explanations, great drawings, great accent for people around the world to understand without the need of subtitles. Great video overall!
@text5425
@text5425 Рік тому
Thanks for watching and commenting❤️ you have been randomly selected from comments as winner of today’s giveaway hit me up via the digits above to claim prize.....🎁🎁
@he-who
@he-who Рік тому
Great video! I never found someone who explained this in a way I could understand until now
@Twobarpsi
@Twobarpsi Рік тому
Loved my 1JZ parallel setup!! What a great engine!
@RedEyedJedi
@RedEyedJedi Рік тому
Thanks man, I learn so much from your channel. You have the ability to explain things perfectly.
@adamscan4u682
@adamscan4u682 Рік тому
The explanations are so easy to understand. Dude is a great teacher
@TheSocialPraxis
@TheSocialPraxis Рік тому
Best UKposts car enthusiasts technical teacher right here!
@jesseolivermusictherapy
@jesseolivermusictherapy Рік тому
My man, the best channel ever! D4A
@mobee7171
@mobee7171 Рік тому
Another absolutely brilliant video. Thank you again. Your explanations are excellent and the way that you make it simple enough for anyone to understand the engineering, is second to none.
@yevgeniyprotsenko9500
@yevgeniyprotsenko9500 Рік тому
This is a scam
@akrocuba
@akrocuba Рік тому
GREAT VOD AND EXPLANTION!!! Thank you!!!!
@fritzmiller9792
@fritzmiller9792 Рік тому
Excellent delivery and graphics....thank you.
@OVER5TEER
@OVER5TEER Рік тому
THANK YOU for using the term boost threshold, and not turbo lag. So tired of seeing these terms getting confused...
@WarriorsPhoto
@WarriorsPhoto Рік тому
Very informative. I always wondered about twin turbo set ups. Now I understand better and thank you.
@DGCastell
@DGCastell Рік тому
amazing explanation, i learned that turbo systems are indeed more complex than i thought!
@thomasbarlow4223
@thomasbarlow4223 Рік тому
I have wondered forever how this works thanks for making a video on it
@st3althyone
@st3althyone Рік тому
Thank you for the excellent explanation of the inner workings of forced induction systems. It’s a breath of fresh air. 😬😉
@specforged5651
@specforged5651 Рік тому
Great work! I’ve been building forced induction engines for years. Mostly smaller stuff like snowmobiles, sxs, atvs, etc etc. However, I’ve also built quite a few larger engines for sand cars and off road racing buggy’s/trucks with everything from Honda 3.5 v6s, Rotary’s, GM small/big blocks, Subaru’s and of course my little VW bug street cars. It’s a lot of fun getting 300-400hp out of a VW. I also own and am I heavily involved with turbocharged aviation engines (that is a whole different story). Anywho, you did a great job explaining the basics of these systems. The one thing the vast majority (especially the rice burners) doesn’t understand is....more boost does not always equal more power, especially in gasoline vehicles. The key is air density. This is achieved by turbos being properly sized like you mentioned and even more importantly in the meat of the compressor map. Most people don’t even know what a compressor map is, let alone how to read one. What I’m getting at is forced induction is a science and requires many many hours of R&D and a vast knowledge of how these systems actually work and what the actual goal is. Never is higher boost the number one goal like many will think or try. Air density is the number one goal which involves a vast amount of different parameters included but certainly not limited to temperature, humidity, barometric pressure, elevation or altitude, drive pressure, etc, etc. Creating actual boost pressure is the easy part, but without paying attention to all of the other factors you will never be successful. Thanks for sharing!
@todddooley793
@todddooley793 Рік тому
Dude, you always do a great job with your explanations and videos. I've learned a lot from you.
@yevgeniyprotsenko9500
@yevgeniyprotsenko9500 Рік тому
This is a scam
@missingno-xk7kp
@missingno-xk7kp Рік тому
THIS is exactly what I have been looking for! TYSM for making this!
@alfredogodoy7528
@alfredogodoy7528 Рік тому
Love this man I genuinely Lear a lot, he explains everything so well
@mattr7274
@mattr7274 Рік тому
Great video. Thanks for being here
@yiplekhong5111
@yiplekhong5111 Рік тому
Great episode..you always make it easier to understand.
@TheGinger1
@TheGinger1 Рік тому
Great as always. Keep up the good work!
@QuakeGamerROTMG
@QuakeGamerROTMG Рік тому
Almost didn't watch this thinking "oh this is simple, it's obvious enough from the names what they are and what the advantages are" But it was much more interesting than I expected. For example I never actually realised the 2JZ's turbos are the same size and just come on separately. The assumption was just that since they are "sequential turbos" that meant it has a smaller one that spools faster and a larger one that spools slower.
@JoseMVV
@JoseMVV 8 місяців тому
Great job in this video! keep doing this :)
NA to Turbo - The Ultimate Guide that Covers Everything + Cost Breakdown
35:30
driving 4 answers
Переглядів 230 тис.
😳 Домінація! ОГЛЯД БОЮ ЛОМАЧЕНКО - КАМБОСОС
04:06
skibidi toilet 73 (part 2)
04:15
DaFuq!?Boom!
Переглядів 31 млн
Эта Мама Испортила Гендер-Пати 😂
00:40
Глеб Рандалайнен
Переглядів 8 млн
Vasiliy Lomachenko vs George Kambosos | INTERNATIONAL LIVE STREAM
3:10:05
Top Rank Boxing
Переглядів 1 млн
Turbo vs. Supercharger - Which is Best?
10:34
Ideal
Переглядів 1,5 млн
TURBO FLUTTER and BLOW OFF VALVES explained in DETAIL - BOOST SCHOOL #8
15:29
driving 4 answers
Переглядів 1,4 млн
Supercharging VS Turbocharging: Which Is Better?
10:19
The Engine Hub
Переглядів 6 тис.
Why Nitro Engines Outpower Everything Else
25:33
driving 4 answers
Переглядів 1,1 млн
Why Exhausts Make So Much Power😵| Explained Ep.27
12:11
337 SPEED
Переглядів 1,1 млн
Why Your Engine Isn't Twin-Charged
15:31
Donut
Переглядів 2,2 млн
TURBO HISTORY - Boost School #1
22:57
driving 4 answers
Переглядів 888 тис.
ALL BOOST CONTROL setups EXPLAINED - Boost School #3
22:51
driving 4 answers
Переглядів 907 тис.
Turbos: How They Work | Science Garage
7:16
Donut
Переглядів 6 млн
ГАЗ-53 на максималках #авто #газ #пикап #грузовик #кастом
1:01
#ЧУДОТЕХНИКИ с Георгием Беловым
Переглядів 1,8 млн
Колодки по-уму и вечный барабан УАЗ👍 #уазпатриот
1:00
Владимир Ильиных
Переглядів 382 тис.
МОТОЦИКЛИ БЕЗ ДОКУМЕНТІВ | В УКРАЇНІ
9:43