I recently dropped a JRSC onto my daily driver. Classically I've been a turbo guy, but I came across a deal I couldn't pass up on the S/C. I ended up trying to make it as "factory" of a setup as possible, so I decided to include a way for the ECU to control the JRSC. How I did this was by re-purposing the IAB tank and vacuum setup to allow the the ECU to control the JRSC bypass valve/S-tube.
Mechanically the GSR secondary runners work the same way as the JRSC bypass valve, so it's a fairly straight forward trick. Using Crome I am able to switch the bypass valve vacuum circuit between active/inactive depending on engine conditions. Mainly I use this for preventing boost below a set MPH/RPM(or other criteria) to prevent wheel spin on launch. Alternatively this also stops boost before the engine is at proper operating temperature or during a CEL event. Alternatively the circuit can be controlled via a simple switch to allow the bypass to stay active at all times, handy for "valet mode" or poor weather where no boost would be safer.
For Turbo applications, it could be a cheap setup to work 2 different boost controllers if you removed the check valve and routed the lines a bit different and basically changed the whole diagram....maybe it doesn't really matter for turbo cars, or figure it out yourself.
So it's fairly simple setup, feel free to comment or go fuck yourself.
Chassis: DB8
- Stock exhaust (yes I know i'm losing power but I like quiet, might get a WS2 later on)
- 12Ga relayed fuel pump re-wire
- Crome chipped/tuned + TunerView II in dash
Engine: Stock GSR engine
- Scion TC injectors(330cc)
- Ebay FPR set @ 60psi
- DIY Icebox = KN Filter + 4" lower intake pipe and velocity stack in the stock airbox.
- RMF Narrow Clone header + cat delete
- B20 crank Pulley
- Boost controlled by IAB + ECU
Made 238 WHP/180 TQ, still gets 30~32Mpg... not shabby for a 200k mile beat down GSR.
IAB Attachment and lines
Vacuum Diagram
Crome Config.
*disregard intake temp setting, it's a glitch.