Here are some pics of where im going with turbo charging this motor. Preemptively, MB specifically forbids turbos on the 616, stating that its not built for it like the 617.
However, ive been in correspondence with some guys who did it, and they all say its great, and they haven't noticed any long term issues at all. On top of that, MB sold the 616 design to India, and the Indians have turbocharged the motor to move their people carriers, so it seems to me its definitely possible.
The big thing one guy was telling me was keeping the pressure low, and having both a boot gauge and an EGT gauge, and keeping an eye on them. With those items, he's said he abused his car daily without any discernible negative result with something like 50-80k on the conversion, so i figured the potential advantages outweigh the potential disadvantages if I do it.
its not put together completely yet, but my plan is to the use the stock 617 turbocharger which is approximately 10psi max. Since the 616 and 617 motors are nearly identical, the 5cyl manifold fits on the 4cyl motor, and all I had to do was lop off that final cylinder on both the exhaust and intake to be in business.
some pics-
this is the 5cyl turbo setup sitting on the 4cyl-
this is where I approximately had to cut to make myself a 4cyl turbo intake manifold, however, the intake holds the stock air cleaner, and a bunch of other ports and brackets, which I wanted to keep, so I made a complex cut and had an aluminum welder patch it back up for me. Now I have a shorter manifold that still has all the nice bits from the longer motor.
My criteria with this swap has been trying to preserve stock systems as completely as I can for future maintenance. I want to combine all custom mods into single or a few parts per each system, so that it makes it easier to use as a fleet vehicle. For instance, if every mod for fitting the engine is done on the subframe, I can order replacement parts for the engine just using the donor car. Same on the turbo, if the turbo is basically stock to a 300D apart from the manifolds, replacement parts can easily be ordered from that donor vehicle as well. Its still going to be a list, but ive already learned to my cost what a car with a million custom bits means when its used by a company in daily service. Id rather keep it to half a million if possible.
pics-
where the length would be decent on the intake-
cut and welded-
on the exhaust, same deal, nipped off the last cylinder-
They helped a little by dividing the manifold-
fitted on the motor-
I mailed it off to a guy who super professionally brazed shut the hole, and cooled it properly to keep the cast iron from getting brittle at the brazing. Guy did an amazing job, has some serious old school talent, and im thinking it will react nicely in service with this treatment-
how they both look on the motor, ready to bold a stock turbo from 617 motor-
