Originally posted by Obioban
View Post
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
ESS 525 kit
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by Nicholas1996 View Post
I mean, yeah kinda. Works good around a track but on the street I wouldn’t say the s54 is great. Still wouldn’t trade it for anything.
2005 IR/IR M3 Coupe
2012 LMB/Black 128i
2008 Black/Black M5 Sedan
- Likes 2
Comment
-
Originally posted by Obioban View Post
I don’t think you know what lag is. The s54 is one of my he least laggy gas engines ever sold. No turbo engine can hold a candle to it in lag.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Nicholas1996 View Post
Maybe lag isn’t the right term. But making all the power at the top isn’t exactly a nice torque curve for the streets either. To each their own though. I turboed my s54 and I love it.
But, good news for you: with the world going turbo and then EV, every car will have your preferred power band going forward.
2005 IR/IR M3 Coupe
2012 LMB/Black 128i
2008 Black/Black M5 Sedan
Comment
-
Originally posted by TylerBrown View PostAny reason you’d go sc over turbo?
- Likes 1
Comment
-
Originally posted by Obioban View Post
The high torque instead of high RPM HP is the main reason I find my EV and e39 M5 boring to drive hard. The "earned" horsepower of the S54's NA/SC power band makes driving it hard way more rewarding to me-- and my torquey cars don't even suffer lag. I don't think I'm unique in that, if you consider all the cars considered to be best driving cars-- Integra, S2000, NSX, McLaren F1, Porsche GT cars-- they're all low torque, high revving cars. Ferrari even artificially limits torque on lower gears on their turbo engines, to keep the high revving NA driving experience.
But, good news for you: with the world going turbo and then EV, every car will have your preferred power band going forward.
Unfortunately, these are sad times in the automotive industry.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Obioban View PostWhat’s a G series kit?
Comment
-
Originally posted by Tigerbimmer View Post
It uses a different supercharger. Supposedly lighter, more efficient and quieter. They've had it for other engines such as the S65 for some time now and looks like they're testing for the S62 based on their social media post yesterday. S54 can't be too far behind...
Comment
-
I am getting more and more interested in these kits but I just feel like it is molesting the the car a bit too much. I've seen pictures more than once of the SC plumbing hitting the underside of the hood and the fact you kind of have to hack up your bumper for the IC doesn't sit too well with me. I guess I could buy a different bumper though if I wanted to go back to stock without runing parts.
I am considering one of these some day, what other items would you guys upgrade to keep the 525 (or 575) from thrashing the rest of the drivetrain though?2004 Silbergrau Metallic 6MT
Karbonius/OEM Snorkel/Flap/HTE Tuned
Ssv1/Catted Sec. 1/SS 2.5" Sec. 2/SCZA
OE CSL Bootlid/AS SSK/BC Coils/4.10 Gears/ Sportline 8S Wheels/Cobra Nogaros
RACP Plates/Vincebar/CMP/Turner RTAB/Beisan
2006 M6 Black Saphire SMG
Instagram
Comment
-
Originally posted by Johnvu View Post
Someone actually already has this. Look up jde46m3 on Instagram... His car rebuild has to be one of, if not, the most detailed and amazing builds I have ever seen. He got ESS to sent him a 575 kit with the G series supercharger.
Another option is the VF kit.... Just heard negative experiences regarding their post purchase support. That makes me apprehensive. I think VF and ESS VT-2 kits use the same blower as well.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Cubieman View PostI am getting more and more interested in these kits but I just feel like it is molesting the the car a bit too much. I've seen pictures more than once of the SC plumbing hitting the underside of the hood and the fact you kind of have to hack up your bumper for the IC doesn't sit too well with me. I guess I could buy a different bumper though if I wanted to go back to stock without runing parts.
I am considering one of these some day, what other items would you guys upgrade to keep the 525 (or 575) from thrashing the rest of the drivetrain though?
I was convinced that I was going to go for the typical N/A build with intake, exhaust, cams and tune but the more I read about the issues folks were chasing, the more I started leaning towards a supercharger. The cost difference is negligible and you are well north of 400whp, even with the lower end of these s/c kits. I'm not looking to "upgrade" much per se. I'm refreshing components under the hood with OE replacements (cooling system, oil cooler, vanos etc) and upgraded some of the bushings throughout ownership. monoball rtabs, solid subframe bushings, rest are mostly all oe stuff. Oh and the subframe is reinforced of course. I'm not planning on revving the car to 5k rpms and dumping the clutch at every red light. Just want a fun mountain/weekend car that can hold a candle to some of the newer fast stuff.
Comment
-
If you want to track, NA is the way to go. FI will cause you to overheat, at least once you’re quick enough that you’re actually pushing the car.
If you want to be faster on the street, and don’t mind the front end weight add, FI is fine (and certainly cheaper per hp).
2005 IR/IR M3 Coupe
2012 LMB/Black 128i
2008 Black/Black M5 Sedan
- Likes 1
Comment
Comment