Using turbo oil pump on nonturbo
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- quasi-mod-o
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Using turbo oil pump on nonturbo
... is there any benefit?
I'll likely be resealing my engine soon, and with the reasonable cost of a brand-new oil pump from Subaru, I was just gonna replace mine with a new one. A turbo one is the same price as a nonturbo.
So, would there be any good reason to do so?
I'll likely be resealing my engine soon, and with the reasonable cost of a brand-new oil pump from Subaru, I was just gonna replace mine with a new one. A turbo one is the same price as a nonturbo.
So, would there be any good reason to do so?
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- Third Gear
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- First Gear
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I doubt it would hurt anything, but the turbo's use added pressure both to compensate for the oil-squirters and the turbo - every hole you punch in the pressurized gallery means less pressure to each component so you increase the gallery pressure and volume to compensate. Also the additional load on the rod journals when under boost means it's easier to overcome the oil film layer that protects the metal - higher oil pressure forces the oil film into the gap - like inflating an air mattress more if you are heavier.
GD
GD
91 SS, 94 GT, 84 Wagon, 83 Hatch, 85 Brat.
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- quasi-mod-o
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I'm sure it wouldn't hurt anything, but I'm not sure it would be of any benefit either.
More oil pressure obviously sounds good, but...
1) would it offer my nonturbo engine any benefit? Easier on valvetrain/bearings/etc.?
2) wouldn't the relief valve just open more to compensate for it, not giving me any extra pressure to begin with?
More oil pressure obviously sounds good, but...
1) would it offer my nonturbo engine any benefit? Easier on valvetrain/bearings/etc.?
2) wouldn't the relief valve just open more to compensate for it, not giving me any extra pressure to begin with?
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- First Gear
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I beleive the releif valve is in the pump so it's going to put the gallery at whatever the turbo oil pressure spec is. I don't have it handy....
But the EJ22E is known to last 300k without major mechanical failures on the stock pump.... if you were planning on adding like 5 psi of turbo to it then I would say go for it - otherwise I don't think there's much benefit to be had. If the stock pump isn't enough then there are serious internal problems that aren't going to be fixed by increaseing the pressure.
The reality is that the 22E doesn't have a demand for the volume and pressure of the turbo pump or Subaru would have put it on there in the first place. As you see the price is not the issue. I would err on the side of caution and assume the Subaru engineers knew what they were doing when they spec'd the pump. You never know - maybe it will hurt the NA lifter or something. I don't know enough to say.
GD
But the EJ22E is known to last 300k without major mechanical failures on the stock pump.... if you were planning on adding like 5 psi of turbo to it then I would say go for it - otherwise I don't think there's much benefit to be had. If the stock pump isn't enough then there are serious internal problems that aren't going to be fixed by increaseing the pressure.
The reality is that the 22E doesn't have a demand for the volume and pressure of the turbo pump or Subaru would have put it on there in the first place. As you see the price is not the issue. I would err on the side of caution and assume the Subaru engineers knew what they were doing when they spec'd the pump. You never know - maybe it will hurt the NA lifter or something. I don't know enough to say.
GD
91 SS, 94 GT, 84 Wagon, 83 Hatch, 85 Brat.
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- quasi-mod-o
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I figured as much.
What I was going to do was rebuild my original one. New rotors, relief valve, full reseal, what not. But just the cost of those parts is very close to just replacing the whole damn pump. So I was considering just replacing the pump, and as the adage goes, 'if you replace, upgrade.'
But no point if there's no benefit. So I'll just stick with what I have.
Thanks for the help.
What I was going to do was rebuild my original one. New rotors, relief valve, full reseal, what not. But just the cost of those parts is very close to just replacing the whole damn pump. So I was considering just replacing the pump, and as the adage goes, 'if you replace, upgrade.'
But no point if there's no benefit. So I'll just stick with what I have.
Thanks for the help.
N/A oil pump maximum pressure: 71psi
Turbo maximum pressure: 85psi
If you wanted, you could shim the relief valve spring to add some pre-load, thus stiffening the spring and bumping the max pressure of your N/A pump up. By how much I have no idea.
Either way I doubt it would make a difference, if you are just running around with a stock engine there is no need for more oil pressure. I would check to make sure your original oil pump is still able to put out around 70psi, and when you pull the engine apart, measure all the tolerances in the pump to make sure they are also within spec. If you've be reasonably good to your oil pump and it hasn't swallowed any metal, then it is probably fine.
Turbo maximum pressure: 85psi
If you wanted, you could shim the relief valve spring to add some pre-load, thus stiffening the spring and bumping the max pressure of your N/A pump up. By how much I have no idea.
Either way I doubt it would make a difference, if you are just running around with a stock engine there is no need for more oil pressure. I would check to make sure your original oil pump is still able to put out around 70psi, and when you pull the engine apart, measure all the tolerances in the pump to make sure they are also within spec. If you've be reasonably good to your oil pump and it hasn't swallowed any metal, then it is probably fine.
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1988 4Runner RIP
2006 Suzuki DRZ400sm
2007 Miata
1994 Miata
2003 WRX Wagon
2016 Mazda 3
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- Fifth Gear
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Too high of a pressure can be a bad thing too. Not sure if 14 psi is going to make a big difference, but too much oil pressure may cause issue with seals.
Josh
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1990 Legacy (AWD, 6MT, & EJ22T Swap)
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surrealmirage.com/subaru
1990 Legacy (AWD, 6MT, & EJ22T Swap)
2020 Outback Limted XT
If you need to get a hold of me please email me rather then pm
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- quasi-mod-o
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I run a 10mm WRX pump on my hot rod 2.5RS engine. It's only been on there 5000 mi or so, but I haven't seen any problems. I wouldn't expect there to be a problems with things like seals since the Ej22E and Ej22T both use the same cams seals, oil pump seals, main seal, etc. It's not like the NA cars have lower quality seals on them. They're the same parts.
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1973 Porsche 914 2.0 l -Suby swap pending
1968 Porsche 911t survivor 47k original miles
2000 2.5RS daily driver.
1999 2.5RS w/ 50+ extra whp
Suby Hai!
It would probably have a small, possibly noticable affect on fuel milage due to using more power to turn the higher pressure, adn if it bypasses it out of the pump would heat the oil more.
Sounds like a waste to me..
Sounds like a waste to me..
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Auto, AWD, Now with 275K + miles!
2005 Outback, 2.5 AWD (wife's new daily)