FMII Conversion to Vband
#1
FMII Conversion to Vband
I've been reading the turbo track reliability thread and started thinking about the FMII kit I have. Is it possible or even worthwhile to convert an FMII kit to Vband? The Vband setup just means two vbands correct? One at the turbo to downpipe junction and one at the downpipe to exhaust?
Thanks for any help!
Thanks for any help!
#2
mkturbo.com
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I've been reading the turbo track reliability thread and started thinking about the FMII kit I have. Is it possible or even worthwhile to convert an FMII kit to Vband? The Vband setup just means two vbands correct? One at the turbo to downpipe junction and one at the downpipe to exhaust?
Thanks for any help!
Thanks for any help!
If you are using good inconel studs, then you do not need to convert to v-band. As the v-band solution was to solve stretching studs, which has now been solved with inconel studs.
#5
Perhaps. I still had issues with the FM inconel studs. First time, a stud backed out through the nut. Andrew's solution is to use Resbond to lock the stud in place, which I spec'd during the first install (not done by me personally). I reinstalled the troublesome stud, again using Resbond. This time the stud pulled out of the manifold, taking out the threads in the process. Ultimately I bought the M10 inconel stud kit from Trackspeed Engineering, had the manifold drilled and tapped and have enjoyed life ever since (give or take a few failed transmissions).
If you haven't installed your FMII kit yet, get the bigger studs and potentially save yourself a lot of heartache in the future. It's infinitely easier (and much less expensive) to do beforehand.
If you haven't installed your FMII kit yet, get the bigger studs and potentially save yourself a lot of heartache in the future. It's infinitely easier (and much less expensive) to do beforehand.
#6
Perhaps. I still had issues with the FM inconel studs. First time, a stud backed out through the nut. Andrew's solution is to use Resbond to lock the stud in place, which I spec'd during the first install (not done by me personally). I reinstalled the troublesome stud, again using Resbond. This time the stud pulled out of the manifold, taking out the threads in the process. Ultimately I bought the M10 inconel stud kit from Trackspeed Engineering, had the manifold drilled and tapped and have enjoyed life ever since (give or take a few failed transmissions).
If you haven't installed your FMII kit yet, get the bigger studs and potentially save yourself a lot of heartache in the future. It's infinitely easier (and much less expensive) to do beforehand.
If you haven't installed your FMII kit yet, get the bigger studs and potentially save yourself a lot of heartache in the future. It's infinitely easier (and much less expensive) to do beforehand.
#7
No, that part should be good as is. I'm not saying that the FM inconel studs are useless, by the way - far from it. Before they were released I had even more serious issues with OEM-style studs, including having one break off flush with the manifold (that was a fun fix). They're just fine for an aggressive driver on back roads, and possibly fine for the track with standard FMII levels of power. For my, somewhat bonkers, build they weren't enough.
#9
FWIW, I've done a lot of track days on my 8mm FM inconel studs and they've held up fine.
--Ian