In Australia, the
era of 'turbo fever' took hold & lots of
local kits were produced by enterprising companies
for lots of different cars. The 4 cylinder 240
Volvo gave one of the best results as it was fuel
injected using the mechanical Bosch
K-Jet.
A number of
early Volvo turbo versions used a blow- thru
carburettor setup.
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1979-80 era
- Note turbo sitting on LH side under inlet
manifold
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image
for CLOSE UP.
This B21E was
turbo'd using a large & heavy Rajay 60
turbo with a separate adjustable wastegate
boosted to a nominal 5 psi. Turbo oil feed was
tee'd off at the pressure switch.
The exhaust manifold was std B21 Volvo with the
exhaust pipe coming down and under the engine belly
pan and up the other side to drive the exhaust
turbine. It had bad turbo lag as the hot exhaust
gasses were pretty cool before they hit the turbo
blades. But once hot it went surprisingly well with
the turbo torque effect pushing you back
pleasantly.
The turbo compressor blew directly into the inlet
manifold (no intercooler in those days) . The K-Jet
fuel header & air sensor plate were relocated
forward in the engine bay.
Modern Motor Magazine, Feb 1980, featured a
seven car turbo kit comparison with kits from
Rymec Turbochargers in Paddington, Sydney.
The kitted 244GL Volvo (owned by Svenska Car
Centre, Sydney) was the most driveable and won the
day. Dyno testing showed std 64 kW, turbo kit 100
kW at rear wheels.
Total conversion cost in 1980 was A$1800 fitted,
including exhaust & fuel lines.
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