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Old 07-26-2013, 07:28 AM   #83 (permalink)
Chuck33079
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Join Date: Nov 2011
Location: Houston
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Drives: 2011 370ztt
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Quote:
Originally Posted by luigi90210 View Post
you can do the GTM TT kit but i would look at others dynos and see their power curve, usually turbos do not have smooth power curves because of the turbo lag(think about it, you're N/A until your turbos start making boost, and when you start making boost, your torque shoots up with your HP)

i personally am a fan of the supercharger kits for our cars because they tend keeps a similar powerband to a stock car since boost matches revs(IE you will not be hitting max boost at low RPM unlike a turbo where its very common to make full boost at low RPMs)

with any FI kit though, you are going to have increased heat, so you want to at the very minimum install an oil cooler(size is dependent on what you do with the car but bigger can be better sometimes) but i would recommend a radiator upgrade on top of the oil cooler if you plan on tracking the car often

i suggest you look into GTM's supercharger kits(stage 1, 1.5, 2 and Twin supercharger) and Stillen's supercharger, honestly take what most people say here with a grain of salt about the stillen kit, everything seems to be over exaggerated imo, i know a few stillen supercharger owners for the 350z/HR/370z(for both cars, the stillen superchargers get ragged on all the tiem) and all of them are very satisfied with the kit and i personally have yet to meet up with someone in person who has had the stillen kit and hated it(all the people i usually meet who hate it have N/A Zs)
Turbos definitely have a different power curve, but it's not a problem. You just have to adjust the way you would approach a corner. Torque coming on earlier isn't a bad thing, the car will just want something different from your driving style to be smooth. You really should be looking at throttle response, not the shape of the curve. A SC will always have a sharper throttle since it's belt driven. You definitely give up some response with a turbo in exchange for much greater torque. The turbo will have more area under the curve since you're making more power earlier. If you decide you'd rather not make full boost until closer to redline, you can set up your boost controller to do that on a turbo kit.

For heavy track use, I'd stay away from the Stillen more so than for street use. It has an issue with heat soak. The heat exchanger is undersized, and I'd rather have an air-to-air intercooler on track over a water-to-air. You'll hit a wall going for more power with it since the MAF piping is undersized, the injectors are too small and the tune they give you with it is bad. You can make it better, but I'd always start with a kit where the ceiling is higher. Once you figure in the cost of fixing the Stillen kit's shortcomings you're getting close to the cost of a GTM kit. There's a lot of guys here on the forum who bought the Stillen kit and have now pulled it off in favor of a turbo setup. I've never seen someone take off a GTM kit.
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