by Matt Bryan
People in suits who like spreadsheets
and graphs with constant growth have stolen and corrupted a new word for their
library of business jargon: turbocharge - to make something more powerful or
quick. As a result of this, the general population as well as the corporate
world like to slap ‘turbo’ on anything to denote a heightened sense of
excitement, but as a petrolhead, and more importantly a relentless pedant, I’d
like to present a brief history of the engineering masterpiece that is the
automotive turbocharger.
The common or garden internal
combustion engine has been around for almost two millennia, and over 130 years
coupled to four wheels and a gearbox; simply, it functions through the
combustion of fuel vapour in a cylinder to push down a piston which turns the
crankshaft and eventually the wheels. A critical part of this cycle is the
preparation of the fuel by mixing it with air, and in a naturally aspirated or
typical engine, the air rushes in through an air intake, usually in the front
grille of the car to funnel in the outside air at the speed the car is moving
forwards. When it comes to engine performance and maximum speed and power,
airflow is the name of the game. In the past, boy-racers would copy motorsport
teams in removing the mesh filters from their air intakes to allow their
engines to breathe properly, only to find that they served a purpose in keeping
outside pollutants from entering the engine and reducing its lifespan; indeed,
many Honda Civics with outrageous rear spoilers have met a grisly end choking
to death in metropolitan traffic.
To that extent, the combustion engine
had hit its maximum performance and the only way to produce more horsepower was
to make a bigger engine that drank more and more fuel; that was until the
advent of forced induction. Forced induction is the process of delivering air
to the engine at a greater pressure, which has the potential to ‘turbocharge’
(sigh) the power-output of an engine. The first came in the form of
superchargers (types of which include centrifugal and twin-screw), an air
compressor driven by the rotation of the engine via a belt, but these had pros
and cons. Superchargers require some horsepower to run, meaning that they would
actually reduce the power output of smaller displacement blocks, meaning that
they are only effective on big engines like Ford’s 302 V8, which at five
litres, is about three times bigger than a normal European four-cylinder.
Because of this, superchargers remained relatively uncommon on production cars,
and their huge size meant that retrofitting lead to massive bonnet scoops and a
50s hot-rod look that wasn’t exactly subtle.
A new method of forced induction had
been trialled by American aviation engineers in the 1920s, but didn’t make it
into cars until the 1960s. These turbochargers were revolutionary; a
turbocharger consists of two separate and sealed air chambers connected by a
turbine, with engine exhaust gases rushing through one side on their way out of
the car and turning a compressor for the intake air. By using the by-products
of combustion, a turbo doesn’t reduce engine power like a supercharger, and is
much smaller, but comes with its own host of engineering challenges. The
turbine can spin up to 250,000 rpm, which is ridiculously fast (something close
to 130ms-1
or 290mph in linear terms for a turbine of radius 5mm) meaning the resulting
force on the bearings and other components like oil seals is immense, and that
the bearings must be constantly coated by their own supply of oil, otherwise
they would just disintegrate. Coupled with the forces, compressing a huge
volume of gas particles very quickly causes a rapid increase in temperature (as
P∝T),
which means that the intake air must be cooled by something more effective than
just a car radiator, usually with a separate intercooler, which adds more
complicated moving parts.
But even with all the complications, a
turbocharger results in a huge increase in engine power, and this has real
world advantages, not just for the motorsport niche. Before their mass
adoption, consumer diesels engines were terrible; a three-litre diesel would
produce around 80bhp, a third of the power of a similar petrol and with three
times the fuel consumption. Diesel engines require much higher compression for
the heavier fuel fraction to ignite, and so a turbocharger allows these perfect
conditions to be reached much more easily, making the engine far more viable.
Before turbocharging, diesels engines were reserved for tractors and tanks, but
the ability to make them much smaller for the same power allowed their use
consumer cars, and now their huge market share.
But diesels are souless; no petrolhead
in history has ever got excited over the grumble and cough of liquid coal. They
live for high-octane, high-velocity excitement of high performance engines, and
the turbocharger helps sate this need in a more environmentally friendly
manner. A turbo gives the same performance in a much smaller engine than the
naturally aspirated equivalent; for example, the 400bhp threshold used to be
the domain of four-litre V8s, but now a two-litre straight-4, an engine
literally half the size, can do the same with a turbo and double the
miles-per-gallon. The first real mass-market turbocharged car was the Saab 99
Turbo in 1978, producing 143bhp and 40 years later, Alfa Romeo’s Giulia
Quadrifoglio set a new standard with 503bhp from a biturbo 2.9-litre V6, and
marking the automotive industry’s wholehearted adoption of small-block
performance engines. The idea that the turbo will save the planet is fallacy,
but conserving ever decreasing oil stocks can only be a good thing.
But not everyone thinks that the humble
turbocharger is the future; as they run hotter, they will statistically produce
a greater volume of toxic nitrous oxides, and a faulty turbo can lead to fuel
igniting too early and lead to catastrophic damage. From a performance
perspective, a naturally aspirated engine has a linear torque and power curve,
whereas a turbo gives an unnatural gradient, a phenomenon referred to as ‘turbo
lag’. At low engine rotation, the turbo is not engaged, and when it does ‘spool
up’ between 2,500 and 3,000 rpm, the rapid increase in power can be
overwhelming. Turboed engines, especially diesels, feel extremely sluggish at
low rpm, and seeing as modern driving style and seemingly fashionable
high-ratio transmissions designed for economic motorway-miles favours keeping
revs low, most turbos get hardly any use in a real world situation. Most will
only ever use theirs accelerating from traffic lights or onto dual-carriageways,
times when the benefits of fuel efficiency are thrown out of the window.
However, new technology has tried to
remedy the issue of ‘turbo lag’, especially the new “E-Boosting” used by Audi
in their SQ7. This system uses a separate 48V circuit with two electric motors
to pre-spool the twin-turbos which makes the power and huge amount of engine
torque instant, especially through the use of sequential turbocharging too
(whereby a smaller turbo is used for low-rpm and then a larger turbo for the
usual high-rev power). But these technologies come on a near £100,000 car to
fix a problem that has existed for decades and asks the question on everyone’s
minds: why are we still using gas-guzzlers? The electric motors used in the
turbo pre-boost could be used to instantly spin up the wheels instead in a
fully electric vehicle that would have a far higher and more efficient power
output than a petrol. Even the more side-lined hydrogen fuel cell technology
gives instant gratification on a press of the pedal. But the main issues with
these supposed ‘cars of the future’ are price and practicality; EVs are coming
down in price, but when they start at the same price as a fully-loaded and
flashy German saloon and degradation of the batteries meaning huge
depreciation, anyone can see the financial problem. As consumers, we are used
to filling up a tank when it gets close to empty, and it being a simple but
expensive five-minute affair; but we as a culture find it hard to adapt to the
concept of 8 hour charges, especially for longer journeys. High voltage and
current ‘super-chargers’ (not to be confused with actual superchargers) promise
45 minute charging, but at the expense of wrecking the lifespan on the
batteries, the most expensive part of any electric car. EVs become more practical
by the day, but in the meantime, fossil fuels still have their place, and the
increasing popularity of the turbocharger can help ease the transition, but it
can’t solve a global problem.
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