Originally Posted by EldarO
On a turbo the turbine drives the compressor. So the more the car revs the more air blows over the turbine thus driving the compressor via a shaft. Now at 15-16PSI boost, the turbine will be spinning at an extreme rate of revolutions. The turbine is clearly seperated from the compressor or else the engine will be reingesting its own exhaust gases which will be a flawed design. However we know this is not the case.
Finding that debris in your cat might explain a high boost turbine failure. We don't know what shape your compressor wheel is in, but if the debris was sourced from the IC piping then there is no way for the compressor wheel to let go. As far as I know the IC is after the turbo (compressor section)Originally Posted by Ribfeast
Also remember that the 1J's have ceramic turbine blades, a no-no for high boost. So either one of three things is the likely cause, 1 - the turbine let go under high boost, 2 - The debris miraclulously made it through an entire cycle of your engine and made its way to the turbine, and at that extreme RPM's of the turbine it just went BANG, however this sounds ridiculous, or 3 - the welding slag might have been located in between your turbine inlet and exhaust manifold. I think number one is the likely cause. Remember ceramic CT12a, high boost = inevitable failure
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