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Learn About ...
Turbo vs. Supercharger ... what's the difference?
Let's start with the similarities. Both turbochargers
and superchargers are called forced induction systems.
They compress the air flowing into the engine (see How Car Engines
Work for a description of airflow in a normal engine). The advantage
of compressing the air is that it lets the engine stuff more air
into a cylinder. More air means that more fuel can be stuffed
in, too, so you get more power from each explosion in each cylinder.
A turbo/supercharged engine produces more power overall than the
same engine without the charging.
The typical boost provided by either a turbocharger or a supercharger
is 6 to 8 pounds per square inch (psi). Since normal atmospheric
pressure is 14.7 psi at sea level, you can see that you are getting
about 50-percent more air into the engine. Therefore, you would
expect to get 50-percent more power. It's not perfectly efficient,
though, so you might get a 30-percent to 40-percent improvement
instead.
The key difference between a turbocharger and a supercharger
is its power supply. Something has to supply the power to
run the air compressor. In a supercharger, there is a belt that
connects directly to the engine. It gets its power the same way
that the water pump or alternator does. A turbocharger, on the
other hand, gets its power from the exhaust stream. The exhaust
runs through a turbine, which in turn spins the compressor.
There are tradeoffs in both systems. In theory, a turbocharger
is more efficient because it is using the "wasted" energy
in the exhaust stream for its power source. On the other hand,
a turbocharger causes some amount of back pressure in the exhaust
system and tends to provide less boost until the engine is running
at higher RPMs. Superchargers are easier to install but tend to
be more expensive.
Information from HowStuffWorks.com
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