|
Rotary Tech - General Rotary Engine related tech section.. Tech section for general Rotary Engine... This includes, building 12As, 13Bs, 20Bs, Renesis, etc... |
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
03-03-2012, 09:39 PM | #1 |
Don Mega
|
The #1 turbo rotary reliability modification?
Mine?
#1 Water Injection. Why > http://www.riceracing.com.au/water-injection.htm Proof > http://www.aquamist.co.uk/vbulletin/...t=1590&page=15
__________________
www.riceracing.com.au Worlds best Apex Seals Coil on Plug Water Injection ECU Calibration |
03-03-2012, 10:14 PM | #2 | |
RCC Contributor
|
FCD? I don't know? it's probably not the best but it's the first. The way I see it is when you first start modding a turbo rotary you put bigger exhaust on. First thing you need coupled with free flowing exhaust is a FCD.
But keep in mind this is coming from a 2nd gen owner and we typically don't have big funds to put into our cars. It's a progression with us. Going faster means adding one thing which means adding another. Which is probably why so many 2nd gen engines fail. We never get to the end point of going fast but safely and reliably.
__________________
Quote:
1990 Vert/ S5-JDM 13BT (rebuilt but with issues I'm working out). Rtek N370 1.7, 550/800 injectors, FD fuel pump, RB REV TII exhaust, Tein springs and Illuminas |
|
03-04-2012, 04:33 PM | #3 |
destroy, rebuild, repeat
|
I would say a proper standalone EMS with a good tune is number one.. (powerfc or rtek do not count lol). You cant properly control WI without it.
But yeah my next big upgrade is water injection. im thinking about getting the Aquamist 2C kit, comes with HSV so you can meter it to the ms resolution, same kit was used on WRC cars
__________________
1993 RX-7 Touring MB, stockport 13B-REW, 9.4CR rotors, T04S 60-1/p-trim single turbo 1986 RX-7 Base project track beast Last edited by 88turboii; 03-04-2012 at 04:36 PM.. |
03-08-2012, 08:13 AM | #4 |
Get off my lawn!!!
|
I'd have to agree that a properly working water injection setup is the best reliability mod, especially once you start changing other things up from stock.
__________________
'94 Touring - Cursed '96 NA Miata '14 Mazda3 Hatch '14 Aprilia RSV4 R |
03-08-2012, 03:21 PM | #6 |
Don Mega
|
tap tap tap it in, no I use rain water living out in the cuntree
when I was in the city I used tap water, but you should be careful as they fill it with all kinds of jizz to keep people stupid, so distilled is best.
__________________
www.riceracing.com.au Worlds best Apex Seals Coil on Plug Water Injection ECU Calibration |
05-08-2012, 11:28 AM | #9 | ||
The Newbie
|
Quote:
distilled = best for cars. Quote:
|
||
05-08-2012, 11:51 AM | #10 |
Get off my lawn!!!
|
The basic reliability mods like AST, all metal Radiator, removing the pre-cat, etc., etc. are always the first thing you'll want to do with an FD if it's not done already since they are cheap and (at this point) going on 20 years old.
Once you start pushing for power you'll see immense benefits from fitting a Water Injection system though. The reason being is that as you boost you will be spraying water into the combustion chamber. Not only will that have the immediate effect of cooling the intake temperatures and combating (damned near eliminating) pre-detonation, but it will also be essentially steam cleaning your engine internals. Running water injection is an excellent way to constantly remove carbon build-up. A stock AST may break, a stock radiator may spring a leak, a stock (USDM) precat will cook the engine bay... Excessive carbon build up WILL ALWAYS lead to a rebuild one way or another. Also, an alternate method (if Water Injection is not an option for whatever reason) is to feed your car distilled water as a matter of maintenance, say on a quarterly schedule. Essentially all you do there is get yourself a gallon of distilled (possibly labeled as "demineralized") water from the grocery store, swing by the local auto parts store and get yourself a length of windshield wiper hose and a "T" fitting. Cut two 6"-8" sections from the end of the wiper hose and fit them to either end of the "T" connector, stick the longer hose to bottom of the fitting. Uncap the two nipples on your UIM (one should feed the front rotor housing, the other to the rear) and fit the two shorter hoses over the nipples. Stick the longer hose into the gallon of water then hold your RPMs steady at 3-4krpms (enough to keep the engine from dying, not so much to come into boost though) and let the vacuum draw in all the water. The engine will start bucking, kick out a ton of smoke, and be REAL loud and pissed sounding when it's sucking in the water but that's ok. It's damned near impossible to hydrolock a rotary, so you're not likely to damage the engine (unless it's already fucked, and removing the carbon makes that damage apparent) while doing this. Once the water is all gone you're good to go. I'd suggest making sure the car is fully warmed up before doing it (go for an aggressive 20 minute drive before doing it), then taking the car out immediately after you're done for another spirited drive to make sure you get everything cleared out.
__________________
'94 Touring - Cursed '96 NA Miata '14 Mazda3 Hatch '14 Aprilia RSV4 R |