Saleen Superchargers vs. Whipple vs. Vortech
#81
I can barely hear my Vortech at idle when I am in the car. Out of the car, you can hear it a lot more. It's dead quiet when cruising, but like Tom I've got a fairly loud exhaust system (OR X pipe and Magnaflows)
#82
yeah I totally agree. I didn't mean that one was faster than the other only that the difference in the way they make power and the way that feels is significant.
#84
+1..... agree 100% on that!
#85
And yeah I think anyone who is doing research on the net should take everything with a grain of salt. If there are hundreds of people saying the same thing then you probably are getting some good info. Or if a person truly is qualified in some way then you're probably alright... probably hehe.
Always best to see for yourself if possible. Becuase ultimately that's what it comes down to.
#86
Do I sell every chance I get - YEP. Do I come here time in and time out good bad or indifferent - YEP. I am just a guy trying to make a buck. I promise to dial back the salesman in me
#87
Matt, not to speak for Anthony but I chose to run a centri (Vortech S-trim with Paxton 'cooler) because I wanted to have and do have 4.10s installed and let me say that although my car doesn't have the torque of a TS down low, it pulls very strongly and gets to 3500 rpm very quickly; at which point the blower (pullied for around 11-12psi) really starts to take off and from there it is a constantly increasing pull to redline.
#88
I for one have to say that while I have never delt with you or GMS I appreciate the fact that you and the rest of the vendors come on the boards to commuicate with possible buyers- regardless of intentions. I feel at the very least you all are making an effort to reach out to a good portion of the public on a more personal level...Then again thats just my 2 cents
#89
So let me rephrase a question thats kinda been puzzling me ever since I made the post about starting a roll race at around 3500rpms on page 4...
Lets say there are 2 Stangs completely equal/stock except for 1 is running a Twinscrew, 1 is running a Centri, ...Both are lined up right at 3500 and punch it at the exact same time... How would the race play out?
Edit: Basically what Im trying to figure out is if the Centrifugal blower is better up top then the Twinscrew- Would the TS still get a slight jump, yet be reeled in by the Centri? Or would the race be equal for a few seconds because the Centri is already making a good amount of boost at that RPM? And lastly...Am I totaly over-analyzing everything in this entire thread?
Lets say there are 2 Stangs completely equal/stock except for 1 is running a Twinscrew, 1 is running a Centri, ...Both are lined up right at 3500 and punch it at the exact same time... How would the race play out?
Edit: Basically what Im trying to figure out is if the Centrifugal blower is better up top then the Twinscrew- Would the TS still get a slight jump, yet be reeled in by the Centri? Or would the race be equal for a few seconds because the Centri is already making a good amount of boost at that RPM? And lastly...Am I totaly over-analyzing everything in this entire thread?
#90
So let me rephrase a question thats kinda been puzzling me ever since I made the post about starting a roll race at around 3500rpms on page 4...
Lets say there are 2 Stangs completely equal/stock except for 1 is running a Twinscrew, 1 is running a Centri, ...Both are lined up right at 3500 and punch it at the exact same time... How would the race play out?
Edit: Basically what Im trying to figure out is if the Centrifugal blower is better up top then the Twinscrew- Would the TS still get a slight jump, yet be reeled in by the Centri? Or would the race be equal for a few seconds because the Centri is already making a good amount of boost at that RPM? And lastly...Am I totaly over-analyzing everything in this entire thread?
Lets say there are 2 Stangs completely equal/stock except for 1 is running a Twinscrew, 1 is running a Centri, ...Both are lined up right at 3500 and punch it at the exact same time... How would the race play out?
Edit: Basically what Im trying to figure out is if the Centrifugal blower is better up top then the Twinscrew- Would the TS still get a slight jump, yet be reeled in by the Centri? Or would the race be equal for a few seconds because the Centri is already making a good amount of boost at that RPM? And lastly...Am I totaly over-analyzing everything in this entire thread?
if both cars were auto trans and could pick any ear they wanted - I would bet on the centrifugal again
Or you could just put a turbo on it and have the best of both worlds
#92
Look at it like this - if you shift at 6100 when you hit 2nd the rpm drops to maybe 4900 to 5300 (depends on gears) it that range teh centrifugal is more efficient then the TS
#93
#98
Ours came with a Saleen S/C onboard. The only thing I have heard bad about either of the 3 is that the Kenne Bell tends to operate at a much higher temperature then does the Whipple or the Saleen. Im sure you do know about over acheiving on the engine with boost, dont go hog wild with it unless you plan on forging the bottom end. If you do that the next question you might want to ask yourself is how much per year do you plan on spending on new rear tires.
QWKENUF
QWKENUF
#99
You know, like I said, I've had a Procharger on my '05 and now I have a twin screw Whipple and both were dyno tuned. I'm sitting here looking at the dyno sheets and I just do not see the loss of mid and top end power on the graphs with the Whipple. I think the biggest misconception with twin screws is that they don't have the top end pull like a centrifugal. The fact that a twin screw has so much pull down low makes the top end less noticable and of course the twin screw graph won't have as steep of a curve up top because the power isn't pouring on all up top. The power is a gradual bottom to top curve, not a mid to high onslaught like the centrifugal has.
I'll be the first to admit that my top end doesn't feel as good as it did with my Procharger, but I believe it's misleading to assume it's the way it really is. With the Whipple the bottom attack is bad *** and that really steals the show before any revs even come into play.
Here are a couple examples from my dyno sheets:
PROCHARGER HP:
3500 rpm's 240
5000 rpm's 420
6300 rpm's 470 peak
PROCHARGER TQ:
3500 rpm's 365
5000 rpm's 435 peak
6300 rpm's 410
__________________________________________________ ____________
__________________________________________________ ____________
WHIPPLE HP:
3500 rpm's 290
5000 rpm's 422
6500 rpm's 480 peak
WHIPPLE TQ:
3500 rpm's 440
5000 rpm's 455
6500 rpm's 390
(TORQUE PEAKS AT 4650 rpms 474 ft lbs)
Pay close attention to what the hp and tq differences are between 3500 rpm's and redline. The hp is basicly the same with both blowers. The torque is where the big difference exists. The twin screw has extreme low end torque. As a matter of fact it has 400 ft lbs at only 2300 rpm's. That's sick. The twin screw does have less torque at redline, but the bottom end difference in torque between the 2 blowers is where the buck stops. There's a difference of 20 ft lbs at redline between the blowers. At 3500 rpm's the difference is staggering....75 ft lbs and it's even worse than that lower in the rpm range.
Bottom line: Twin screws pull hard up top it's just that the bottom end pull already steals the show.......BIG TIME!
The Procharger was at 11 lbs boost, the Whipple at 10.5 lbs boost. The comment that a centrifugal blower is much stronger above 3500 rpm's is just plain wrong. I've got dyno proof of that with the same car, same mods, same basic temp and humidity. I will say that the Procharger definitely feels stronger up top, but the torque curve is smaller and placed up higher in the rpm range. That's why it feels that way from what I see.
I'll be the first to admit that my top end doesn't feel as good as it did with my Procharger, but I believe it's misleading to assume it's the way it really is. With the Whipple the bottom attack is bad *** and that really steals the show before any revs even come into play.
Here are a couple examples from my dyno sheets:
PROCHARGER HP:
3500 rpm's 240
5000 rpm's 420
6300 rpm's 470 peak
PROCHARGER TQ:
3500 rpm's 365
5000 rpm's 435 peak
6300 rpm's 410
__________________________________________________ ____________
__________________________________________________ ____________
WHIPPLE HP:
3500 rpm's 290
5000 rpm's 422
6500 rpm's 480 peak
WHIPPLE TQ:
3500 rpm's 440
5000 rpm's 455
6500 rpm's 390
(TORQUE PEAKS AT 4650 rpms 474 ft lbs)
Pay close attention to what the hp and tq differences are between 3500 rpm's and redline. The hp is basicly the same with both blowers. The torque is where the big difference exists. The twin screw has extreme low end torque. As a matter of fact it has 400 ft lbs at only 2300 rpm's. That's sick. The twin screw does have less torque at redline, but the bottom end difference in torque between the 2 blowers is where the buck stops. There's a difference of 20 ft lbs at redline between the blowers. At 3500 rpm's the difference is staggering....75 ft lbs and it's even worse than that lower in the rpm range.
Bottom line: Twin screws pull hard up top it's just that the bottom end pull already steals the show.......BIG TIME!
The Procharger was at 11 lbs boost, the Whipple at 10.5 lbs boost. The comment that a centrifugal blower is much stronger above 3500 rpm's is just plain wrong. I've got dyno proof of that with the same car, same mods, same basic temp and humidity. I will say that the Procharger definitely feels stronger up top, but the torque curve is smaller and placed up higher in the rpm range. That's why it feels that way from what I see.