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- #121
@gerg Turbo wheels and shaft are a single unit, can't spin anything independently.
How long should the shaft/wheels continue to spin if you spin the nut on the cold side with your finger and thumb as hard as you can? The bearing feels smooth and spins freely, but it will come to a stop in about a rotation, less than 2 for sure. I've been treating this as OK, but I'm now starting to 2nd guess myself, as I know when and engine shuts off the turbo spins to a stop over the next 20 seconds or so if you listen at the tailpipe, but it's spinning much faster than in my test...anyone know what I should be looking for?
If the bearing is shot and I just didn't know how to test for a bad bearing, then that would explain a lot. I pulled the intake off the truck and spun the stock turbo in the same fashion, very unscientific testing here, but it free spins about 2X as far as the Gturbo. Insignificant difference? I thought so. Anyone know?
How long should the shaft/wheels continue to spin if you spin the nut on the cold side with your finger and thumb as hard as you can? The bearing feels smooth and spins freely, but it will come to a stop in about a rotation, less than 2 for sure. I've been treating this as OK, but I'm now starting to 2nd guess myself, as I know when and engine shuts off the turbo spins to a stop over the next 20 seconds or so if you listen at the tailpipe, but it's spinning much faster than in my test...anyone know what I should be looking for?
If the bearing is shot and I just didn't know how to test for a bad bearing, then that would explain a lot. I pulled the intake off the truck and spun the stock turbo in the same fashion, very unscientific testing here, but it free spins about 2X as far as the Gturbo. Insignificant difference? I thought so. Anyone know?
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