ahh snap, youve right my thinking was wrong
just was thinking that that i can reduce abit stress when i flow more air with less psi
i hate those custom rods
Tensile stress into the rod is purely a function of RPM. While compressive stress in the rod is a function of cylinder pressure during the combustion process (IE-POWER). Generally speaking, an engine with a big turbo running the same boost as an identical engine running a small turbo, the big turbo engine makes higher peak cylinder pressure, higher average cylinder pressure, more HP.
Take two identical engines, one with a relatively small turbo, one with a relatively large turbo. Say the engine with the smaller turbo is running 12 PSI and making 250HP. Where the engine with the large turbo is running 9 PSI and also making 250HP.
If the the turbine and the compressor efficiencies were identical between turbo's at their respective boost levels (not likely, but an assumption for illustrative purposes) , then the mass flow rate of air through both engines would almost be the same. (the smaller turbo engine would have a higher thermal efficiency from the higher dynamic compression ratio, but this is only advantageous if the engine can be tuned reach peak pressure ~14*ATDC) Both would have about the same AVERAGE peak pressure, but the engine with the smaller turbo will have a higher peak pressure, hence, a higher peak compressive loading on the rod. While the big turbo engine will have a lower peak pressure to make the same Average pressure. THIS is what you want.
Oh yeah, and this is just a sweeping generalization. It's a lot more complicated because you have to consider how each subsystem affects the other systems around it.