SRT42EnVy
01-01-2006, 09:49 PM
THE AGP TURBO KIT HOW-TO!
Tools needed:¼” drive ratchet
3/8” drive ratchet
¾” socket
11/16” socket
10mm socket
11mm socket and open end wrench and if possible, ratcheting wrench
12mm socket and open end wrench
13 mm socket and open end wrench
14mm socket and open end wrench
15mm socket and open end wrench
16mm socket and open end wrench
17mm socket and open end wrench
Towels
Flathead screwdriver
Dremel, Sawzall, die-grinder or compact demo saw
Zip ties
Jack
Jackstands
Creeper if you have it
Crescent/adjustable wrench
***I may leave some stuff out and have to add it later***
Note, this was MY experience from 2 AGP installs done in my driveway. In regards to time, this is written with the assumption that you are starting out with an aftermarket intake however, removing the stock intake is not rocket science. AGP has instructions and they are wonderful, but hopefully I broke it down as simple as possible going from memory. I also claim no responsibility to the end users results be it from overboosting, lack of mechanical knowledge, or lack of attention to detail. Basically, if your car grenades, can’t blame me!
So you have your turbo kit!
What should be included:
Manifold
O2 housing
Dump tube
Wastegate
Turbo
Bag of clamps, a couple of plugs, oil drain line and some hose
The nuts and bolts included with be loosely attached to the bolted parts
Overflow bottle
Cute lil AGPturbo.com stickers
Install time: 5-7 hours
First you SHOULD have a spotter to help with odds and ends as well as to spot you while you are working under the car. You want to jack the car up on each side and place jackstands under the mounting points specified.(Refer to your owners manual) Get under the car and first, just check things out to see if you have any issues that may need to be addressed prior to the install. Look for leaks, loose cables, vac lines, etc. With the 10mm socket, follow the power steering cooler mounts to the bolts securing them, remove those. This gets the cooler out of the way for reaching up the back of the block. See Fig 1.
Fig 1
Slide towards the front of the car and look for a pet**** on the bottom of the radiator and loosen that while retrieving the coolant in a bucket. Have to be OSHA and EPA friendly! Drain a good amount out, if it fills the bucket up, you should be good. You will see why later, as well as if you should have drained more!
Remove the intake using an 8mm socket for standard clamps and 11mm for T-bolt clamps. Put that out of the way somewhere. With a 13mm socket and extension, take the battery tray hold down bolt out. Take the terminals off of the battery and remove it along with the battery blanket and don’t forget to disconnect the temperature sensor. Next you will take the four corners of the battery tray, with the nuts and bolts, and remove those with a 10mm socket. Finally, pull off the front large bolt with a 13mm. Remove the tray. This gives you plenty of room to work with. You will also want to remove the coil packs 4 10mm bolts and unplug it, as well as remove the plug wires. Place tape over the plug holes to keep debris out. See Fig 2.
Fig 2.
Next, the turbo coolant hardline, running next to the valve cover, the one that rubs most intakes, Remove both hose clamps and pull the rubber line off. A small flathead may aid in this but it is still a bear. Use rags to soak up any coolant that may be left. AGP provides a cap and a small clamp to seal the bottom part of the line going to the block. Slide that on there and tighten.
Now, look at the solenoid block with your three solenoids going to various vacuum lines. Remove all lines except the red and white lines. Follow their termination point and remove from there as well. I was told by someone that it is not necessary to cap the unused ports but I did for good measure anyway. There will be a green check valve that AGP illustrates in a picture. It has 3 nipples. Cap the middle one which makes a T. Just have the vacuum line making a straight through flow.
Now that the preliminary/easy stuff is out of the way, let’s get to it. The coolant overflow bottle, a 10mm is used to remove the top nut and the bottom bolt. The bottom bolt is on the far left side if you are looking at the bottle forward and towards the passenger side fender. Carefully remove that since it still may have coolant and remove the hose going to the thermostat housing. See Fig 3. Now, with a 10mm socket OR 10mm ratcheting wrench, remove the heat shield bolts. There should be one top close to the head, one aft of that, one on the drivers side, one on the passenger side, and one to the right of that one. Work the upper shield out of the engine bay, and if you want to keep it, try to preserve it. See Fig 4.
Fig 3.
Fig 4.
From there, a small flathead or needlenose pliers will aid in taking the cotter pin off of the wastegate flapper then 11mm(I think) socket will be used to remove the wastegate. Now, time to crawl up under the car! You are going to want to remove the down pipe at least. This entails unplugging the O2 sensor, should you still have one, while being very careful not to damage it. 13mm or 14mm on a 3/8” drive with a 6” extension should do the trick and provide enough leverage. There are four bolts holding this to the O2 housing. Take the downpipe out and set it aside. The O2 housing will be next and again, it is either a 13mm or 14mm socket/extension pair that will remove this. Possibly coming from the top would be easier for a couple of bolts. It just depends on what is easier for you. Pull the O2 housing through the bottom of the car. Next, you will see a black bracket connecting the turbo to the block for support. A 10mm socket will remove this and the bottom heat shield SHOULD drop down. That bottom shield is a pain and may need some caressing.
Get back up top and with a 16mm ratcheting wrench preferably, or open ended, remove the banjo bolt on top of the turbo for the coolant feed line. On the back, there are two more banjo bolts which one is an oil feed line and the other is a coolant return. Remove both of those again, with a 16mm whatever is comfortable wrench! From under the car, there is a larger oil drain hard line terminating just above the oil pan. With a 10mm socket no a ¼” drive and 6” extension, you can remove the 10 nuts holding it onto the turbo. Then, with some channel locks, open the clamp near the pan and slide the rubber hose up. Again, a small flathead may be needed to aid in this. The final part would be using an 8mm socket, for ease, or a flathead to loosen the clamp that mates the turbo and the hot side charge pipe . Under the car, again, use the above tools to loosen the clamp leading from the factory black charge pipe to the intercooler plumbing be it hardpipe or factory rubber. With an 11mm socket, remove the two bolts attaching the pipe to the bottom of the oil pan. With some work, the pipe should slide off of the compressor outlet, and be able to be removed from under the car.
The oil feed and coolant return can stay there since they are off of the turbo, these will come off later due to ease. At this point you should have easy access to the head bolts holding the turbo/manifold combo to the head. This would be a good point to smoke a cigarette, get a drink, relax, whatever….Because after this, it is smooth sailing.
Welcome back! With a 10mm socket on a ¼” drive, and a 10mm open end wrench, or ratcheting wrench. You will now remove all of the head bolts and nuts. CAREFULLY, to not damage the head, remove the combo from the head and pull, while turning/caressing the combo from the drivers side where the battery tray would reside. See Fig 5. You should inspect your gasket between the head and manifold for any loss of integrity. If it looks good, which it should, reuse it. You should have 3 head studs and the rest bolts. See Fig 6.
Tools needed:¼” drive ratchet
3/8” drive ratchet
¾” socket
11/16” socket
10mm socket
11mm socket and open end wrench and if possible, ratcheting wrench
12mm socket and open end wrench
13 mm socket and open end wrench
14mm socket and open end wrench
15mm socket and open end wrench
16mm socket and open end wrench
17mm socket and open end wrench
Towels
Flathead screwdriver
Dremel, Sawzall, die-grinder or compact demo saw
Zip ties
Jack
Jackstands
Creeper if you have it
Crescent/adjustable wrench
***I may leave some stuff out and have to add it later***
Note, this was MY experience from 2 AGP installs done in my driveway. In regards to time, this is written with the assumption that you are starting out with an aftermarket intake however, removing the stock intake is not rocket science. AGP has instructions and they are wonderful, but hopefully I broke it down as simple as possible going from memory. I also claim no responsibility to the end users results be it from overboosting, lack of mechanical knowledge, or lack of attention to detail. Basically, if your car grenades, can’t blame me!
So you have your turbo kit!
What should be included:
Manifold
O2 housing
Dump tube
Wastegate
Turbo
Bag of clamps, a couple of plugs, oil drain line and some hose
The nuts and bolts included with be loosely attached to the bolted parts
Overflow bottle
Cute lil AGPturbo.com stickers
Install time: 5-7 hours
First you SHOULD have a spotter to help with odds and ends as well as to spot you while you are working under the car. You want to jack the car up on each side and place jackstands under the mounting points specified.(Refer to your owners manual) Get under the car and first, just check things out to see if you have any issues that may need to be addressed prior to the install. Look for leaks, loose cables, vac lines, etc. With the 10mm socket, follow the power steering cooler mounts to the bolts securing them, remove those. This gets the cooler out of the way for reaching up the back of the block. See Fig 1.
Fig 1
Slide towards the front of the car and look for a pet**** on the bottom of the radiator and loosen that while retrieving the coolant in a bucket. Have to be OSHA and EPA friendly! Drain a good amount out, if it fills the bucket up, you should be good. You will see why later, as well as if you should have drained more!
Remove the intake using an 8mm socket for standard clamps and 11mm for T-bolt clamps. Put that out of the way somewhere. With a 13mm socket and extension, take the battery tray hold down bolt out. Take the terminals off of the battery and remove it along with the battery blanket and don’t forget to disconnect the temperature sensor. Next you will take the four corners of the battery tray, with the nuts and bolts, and remove those with a 10mm socket. Finally, pull off the front large bolt with a 13mm. Remove the tray. This gives you plenty of room to work with. You will also want to remove the coil packs 4 10mm bolts and unplug it, as well as remove the plug wires. Place tape over the plug holes to keep debris out. See Fig 2.
Fig 2.
Next, the turbo coolant hardline, running next to the valve cover, the one that rubs most intakes, Remove both hose clamps and pull the rubber line off. A small flathead may aid in this but it is still a bear. Use rags to soak up any coolant that may be left. AGP provides a cap and a small clamp to seal the bottom part of the line going to the block. Slide that on there and tighten.
Now, look at the solenoid block with your three solenoids going to various vacuum lines. Remove all lines except the red and white lines. Follow their termination point and remove from there as well. I was told by someone that it is not necessary to cap the unused ports but I did for good measure anyway. There will be a green check valve that AGP illustrates in a picture. It has 3 nipples. Cap the middle one which makes a T. Just have the vacuum line making a straight through flow.
Now that the preliminary/easy stuff is out of the way, let’s get to it. The coolant overflow bottle, a 10mm is used to remove the top nut and the bottom bolt. The bottom bolt is on the far left side if you are looking at the bottle forward and towards the passenger side fender. Carefully remove that since it still may have coolant and remove the hose going to the thermostat housing. See Fig 3. Now, with a 10mm socket OR 10mm ratcheting wrench, remove the heat shield bolts. There should be one top close to the head, one aft of that, one on the drivers side, one on the passenger side, and one to the right of that one. Work the upper shield out of the engine bay, and if you want to keep it, try to preserve it. See Fig 4.
Fig 3.
Fig 4.
From there, a small flathead or needlenose pliers will aid in taking the cotter pin off of the wastegate flapper then 11mm(I think) socket will be used to remove the wastegate. Now, time to crawl up under the car! You are going to want to remove the down pipe at least. This entails unplugging the O2 sensor, should you still have one, while being very careful not to damage it. 13mm or 14mm on a 3/8” drive with a 6” extension should do the trick and provide enough leverage. There are four bolts holding this to the O2 housing. Take the downpipe out and set it aside. The O2 housing will be next and again, it is either a 13mm or 14mm socket/extension pair that will remove this. Possibly coming from the top would be easier for a couple of bolts. It just depends on what is easier for you. Pull the O2 housing through the bottom of the car. Next, you will see a black bracket connecting the turbo to the block for support. A 10mm socket will remove this and the bottom heat shield SHOULD drop down. That bottom shield is a pain and may need some caressing.
Get back up top and with a 16mm ratcheting wrench preferably, or open ended, remove the banjo bolt on top of the turbo for the coolant feed line. On the back, there are two more banjo bolts which one is an oil feed line and the other is a coolant return. Remove both of those again, with a 16mm whatever is comfortable wrench! From under the car, there is a larger oil drain hard line terminating just above the oil pan. With a 10mm socket no a ¼” drive and 6” extension, you can remove the 10 nuts holding it onto the turbo. Then, with some channel locks, open the clamp near the pan and slide the rubber hose up. Again, a small flathead may be needed to aid in this. The final part would be using an 8mm socket, for ease, or a flathead to loosen the clamp that mates the turbo and the hot side charge pipe . Under the car, again, use the above tools to loosen the clamp leading from the factory black charge pipe to the intercooler plumbing be it hardpipe or factory rubber. With an 11mm socket, remove the two bolts attaching the pipe to the bottom of the oil pan. With some work, the pipe should slide off of the compressor outlet, and be able to be removed from under the car.
The oil feed and coolant return can stay there since they are off of the turbo, these will come off later due to ease. At this point you should have easy access to the head bolts holding the turbo/manifold combo to the head. This would be a good point to smoke a cigarette, get a drink, relax, whatever….Because after this, it is smooth sailing.
Welcome back! With a 10mm socket on a ¼” drive, and a 10mm open end wrench, or ratcheting wrench. You will now remove all of the head bolts and nuts. CAREFULLY, to not damage the head, remove the combo from the head and pull, while turning/caressing the combo from the drivers side where the battery tray would reside. See Fig 5. You should inspect your gasket between the head and manifold for any loss of integrity. If it looks good, which it should, reuse it. You should have 3 head studs and the rest bolts. See Fig 6.