This article was first published in 2005.
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Last week in
Technokill: Building a Blown Hybrid, Part 1, we backgrounded what needed to be considered before
fitting a supercharger to a hybrid petrol/electric car – a first model Toyota
Prius. This week we get on and do it!
Fitting the Blower
While on paper fitting the small ex-Subaru Vivio AMR300 supercharger looked
easy, in practice it was a nightmare job.
This was primarily because of the very cramped engine bay in the Prius, which
necessitated (for example) integrating the supercharger mount into a completely
new fabricated engine mount. This bracket was made from mild steel, using 9mm
plate, 12mm plate and 40 x 8mm bar, arc welded together. In addition to the
heavily gusseted engine mount, the bracket also incorporated the fabricated belt
tensioner. In all, something like 40 hours of work went into making the bracket.
When spending the many hours working on the car, it was always in the back of
my mind that the supercharger may prove a complete failure – something which
isn’t conducive to lots of effort! In addition to the points made last week,
there were further concerns:
- It wasn’t known what boost level that the standard Prius crank drive pulley
and standard Vivio supercharger pulley would give
- It wasn’t know whether or not the engine would immediately detonate when
given any boost
- There wasn’t room to fit a larger supercharger pulley if boost proved to be
too high
- It wasn’t known whether the intercooler would be large enough
- It wasn’t known whether there would be sufficient fuel available (injector
duty cycle and pump flow) to maintain acceptable air/fuel ratios on any
boost level
So rather than continue working until the system was completely finished – only
possibly to find it could never work – I therefore resolved to do some testing
with the system only half-installed. So with the supercharger running (but
drawing air through a hastily put together and fairly restrictive intake, and
with the intercooler projecting out the front of the car, held in place only
with hoses and clamps!) I undertook a very careful test drive. The bumper wasn’t
fitted, the bonnet was held down with wire, and the numberplate was cable-tied
into place. Mixtures were monitored with a MoTeC air/fuel ratio meter.
Because no supercharger bypass had yet been fitted, and because the
supercharger was blowing into the throttle, at idle the intake air rapidly
became hot. This lack of recirc valve also meant that the throttle had to be
closed very slowly, otherwise the pressure build-up caused a hose to pop off.
However, the results of this preliminary test were a huge relief. The boost
level was between 5-7 psi, the car didn’t detonate, the air/fuel ratios were
satisfactory (well within the range of being able to be tuned with the Digital
Fuel Adjuster), the multi-rib belt drive (although having more whip than wanted)
didn’t come off and there was no apparent belt slippage, and the intake air
temps after the intercooler were low.
So I could continue with the installation, which by this stage looked like it
would take up a full month of work.
Installing the Intercooler and Airbox
The next steps were to properly install the intercooler and airbox, and make
the plumbing.
The intercooler – from a diesel Mitsubishi Pajero – was to be mounted at the
front of the car. It could be placed either behind or in front of the power
converter radiator. (The underbonnet power converter runs its own dedicated
water cooling system, complete with pump and front-mounted radiator.) Obviously,
from a point of view of maximum cooling, the intercooler would be best at the
very front of the car. However, autos.groups.yahoo.com sources suggested that during development of the Prius, Toyota engineers
had difficulty keeping the temperature of the power converter down – and
so the radiator for this dedicated system shouldn’t be blocked.
But then again, keeping the boosted intake air as low in temp as possible
would also be very important!
The decision was made – mount the intercooler in front of all the other heat
exchangers. In this position it blocks about half the area of the power
converter radiator.
In order that the intercooler could be mounted in this position, the power
converter radiator needed to be moved backwards and the frontal intrusion bar
modified to provide clearance. I cut out a section of the original bar and then
had welded across the gap a section of the bar from the half-cut Prius that I
had bought. Note that this bar is slightly curved in plan, so it couldn’t just
be replaced with straight rectangular tube.
The standard airbox sits on top of the engine and its outlet is in the wrong
place to feed the supercharger. A new airbox was sourced from a Daihatsu Sirion
and was mounted in the front guard. The original Prius airflow meter is built
into the airbox. The airflow meter was carefully cut out so that it could be
mounted conventionally in-line after the new airbox. The wiring loom to the
airflow meter was extended to reach the new airflow meter location.
The supercharger inlet, outlet and intercooler plumbing was fabricated
primarily from 50mm copper tube and fittings which were brazed together. Taking
this approach gave high-flow bends which were still tight in radius, and also
allowed much of the tubing to be fitted together (the bends incorporate sockets
into which the tube pushes) before being taken to the welder. However, after the
plumbing was in place, a major problem appeared. The tubes running to the
intercooler passed over the top of the radiator, before sharply bending
downwards to reach the intercooler.
And when these were in place, the bonnet wouldn’t shut....
While checking clearance to the bonnet seems an obvious step, in the case of
the Prius the very steeply sloping bonnet (which also has an underside that
actually wraps over and around the bonnet locking platform) meant that
clearances in this area were far tighter than in other cars. To overcome the
problem, the front tubes needed to be changed from copper to rubber, and part of
the underside metalwork of the bonnet had to be (very carefully!) cut away.
There were also two other very tight spots – the inlet and outlet of the
supercharger. The inlet, closest to the back of the car, is located very near an
intake manifold head stud and the variable cam timing solenoid. The copper inlet
pipe had to be hand-beaten to shape to clear both of these obstacles. The outlet
was similar, although in this case it was the radiator filler neck and radiator
fan shroud to which clearance was required. In fact, this area was so tight that
the radiator was pulled forward a little at the top. As a result, both the inlet
and outlet connections to the supercharger are smaller in cross-sectional area
than would be expected with 50mm tube; however the reductions in cross-sectional
area are made smoothly and so the flow will not be as restricted as it would if these changes were abrupt.
The placement of the intercooler plumbing and the moving forward of the top
of the radiator meant that the original panel across the top of the radiator had
to be replaced with a new panel. This was made from aluminium channel. Foam
rubber was used to block the gap by which air could have otherwise bypassed the
radiator. The removal of the panel above the radiator also meant that the bonnet
lock needed to be supported by other means; an aluminium bar was bolted across
the car in front of the air-con condenser and this carries the bonnet lock and
the horns.
A supercharger bypass valve was incorporated in the system. This comprises a
GFB recirculating blow-off valve, normally used on a turbo car. It has 32mm
plumbing and is beautifully made. The connections to this valve were plumbed-in
just after the airflow meter and just before the throttle body.
It was literally only at this stage – after nearly 3 weeks of work – that the
system even started to look near complete.
Second Test
In order that – if necessary - changes could be made to the supercharger
bracket, the inlet and outlet plumbing, the airbox and everything else new, the
second test drive was undertaken without any of the supercharger system
components painted.
When the engine was started, the supercharger was very loud – because of
insufficient intake manifold vacuum, the bypass valve wasn’t opening. I disassembled the GFB
valve and shortened the spring, which reduced the preload and allowed the valve
to open at idle. However, the supercharger noise through the new airbox was
still fearsome – far louder than desired. Blocking off some of the air
inlet to the box decreased the noise substantially, indicating that the noise
could possibly be reduced through further intake tuning.
However, the next problem was much more major: driving the car showed only 2
psi maximum boost. After checking clamps and blocking off the blow-off valve in
case it was leaking, a simple mistake was found – the crankcase breather hose
was off the intake manifold. With this huge boost leak plugged, boost again rose
back to the previous level.
The belt drive had settled down (I gave it greater tension that stopped its
whipping) and on the road the car was performing fine. The mixtures were a
little leaner than preferable, but that could be easily changed with the Digital
Fuel Adjuster.
So at this stage things were looking very good - but they weren’t to continue
that way....
Next week: on the road with the world’s only supercharged, intercooler
battery/electric hybrid
The GFB blow-off valve was supplied courtesy of the manufacturer.
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