Total boost: 10 Big turbo boost: 2
Total boost: 15 Big turbo boost: 4
Total boost: 20 Big turbo boost: 9
Here's how you find out what the turbos are doing. I'll post up the formula stuff for the whole teach a man to fish... thing.
Formulas:
PR = (PSIg + At pressure)/At pressure
PR = pressure ratio, PSIg = gauge boost pressure reading, At pressure = atmospheric pressure (this changes depending upon your elevation, for you the calculators said 14.3 so that's the value I'll use).
Total PR = (10 + 14.3)/14.3 = 1.70
Big Turbo (Primary) PR = (2 + 14.3)/14.3 = 1.14
Then take Total PR/Big Turbo PR to get the Little Turbo (secondary) PR
Little turbo (Secondary) PR = 1.70/1.14 = 1.49
Then to get Little turbo psi work the top formula backwards
Little turbo psi = ( 1.49 * 14.3) - 14.3 = 7.0 psi
So, running the formula gets us the following boost numbers:
Total boost: 10 Big: 2 Little: 7.0
Total boost: 15 Big: 4 Little: 8.6
Total boost: 20 Big: 9 Little: 6.7
Here's how I'm interpreting this and why we run the numbers. Up to 15psi total boost your little turbo is doing more work. This is good because it spools faster and that's what you want. Then at 20psi total we are seeing the big turbo come alive and start working more than the little turbo. This looks like a decent transition so far. When you get a new set of numbers let's run these calculations again to see what the load sharing looks like in the upper psi. To me the load sharing is Ok from these numbers so far. My hunch is that the little is just not flowing enough exhaust out (it's choking the flow) at higher boost due to no active wastegate. This will reduce power and increase egts at current fuel settings. I want to see if the numbers will or will not support/show that. It may be that the little is not doing enough work as well. If the turbos are working well together then it is fueling or intercooling settings/issues.