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Compatible for Nissan Chra

The turbocharger cartridge (Centre Housing Rotating Assembly) is essentially a turbocharger minus the compressor and turbine housings. CHRA incorporates the complete rotating assembly, shaft and wheel, bearing housing and compressor wheel.Turbo cartridges prevent oil and coolant from entering the intake or exhaust.

Hanging a Maxpeedingrods Turbo Cartridge on a small engine allows it to breathe big, increasing power output up to 320HP. Our compatible for Nissan CHRA is the ideal replacement component option for your turbo. Compatible for Nissan Almera, compatible for Nissan Navara, compatible for Nissan Patrol, compatible for Nissan Pathfinder, etc for your selection.

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For GT2052V Turbo Cartridge Core compatible for NISSAN PATROL 3.0L D ZD30DDTI CHRA 724639 Water

(4)
$98.00

Compatible for Nissan Navara D40 2.5DI QW25 for GT2056V 751243-5002S Turbo Cartridge

(3)
$77.00

Compatible for CabStar 2.5 Dci YD25DDTI 110HP RHF4H turbo cartridge CHRA VN4 14411-MB40B

(1)
$103.00

Compatible for Nissan Navara Pathfinder 2.5 Di YD25 Turbo cartridge for GT2056V 769708 767720

(0)
$112.00
-13%

Turbo Catridge compatible for Nissan Pathfinder R50 3.0L ZD30 1995-2004 for GT2052V Replacement

(1)
$195.00 $224.00

Compatible for Nissan Patrol RD28Ti Y61 2.8 14411-VB300 for GT1752 Turbo Cartridge Core

(0)
$124.00

Turbo Catridge compatible for Nissan Navara D22 D40 2.5L YD25 RHF4H Replacement

(0)
$113.00

Compatible for Nissan Almera Primera X-Trail 2.2 YD22ED for GT1849V turbo core 14411-AW400 CHRA

(0)
$128.00

Compatible for NISSAN Navara D22 ZD30 3.0L 14411-9S000 HT12-19 B/D Turbocharger Cartridge

(2)
$108.00
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  • What is A Turbocharger?

    A turbocharger(turbo)is a turbine-driven forced induction device that increases an internal combustion engine’s efficiency and power output by forcing extra air into the combustion chamber. When a turbocharger brings more air into the chamber, it gets mixed with more fuel, yielding more power as a result. In reality, the turbo doesn’t really get “extra air” into the engine, it actually compresses the air, which means there are more molecules being packed into the same space.

  • How Does a Turbocharger Work?

    The most basic observation we can make about a turbocharger is that it is made up of two main sections: the turbine and the compressor.The turbine consists of the turbine wheel and the turbine housing. As your engine is running it creates exhaust gasses, these exhaust gasses would otherwise be wasted, but on a turbocharged engine, these hot and fast-moving gasses are used to drive the turbine wheel. On the other side, it is the compressor. The compressor also consists of two parts: the compressor wheeland the compressor housing. The compressor wheel has a fixed connection to the turbine wheel via a common shaft. When you spin the turbine wheel, you also spin the compressor wheel. The compressor wheel shape is designed to suck in air into the turbocharger. It’s called the compressor wheel because other than sucking the air in, the compressor wheel plays an important part in compressing the air, after which it sends the air through the compressor housing into your engine intake manifold and your combustion chamber. The compressed air is pushed into the engine, allowing the engine to burn more fuel to produce more power.

  • How to choose the right turbocharger?

    When choosing a high performance turbocharger, first determine your horsepower goals. Each turbocharger has a corresponding horsepower and engine displacement. If a turbocharger is too large for your engine, you will have a lot of turbo lag, and if a turbocharger is too small for your engine, you may not reach your horsepower goal. When selecting compressor and turbine housings, choose the one that will pump the most air into the cylinders, but will not raise the temperature above that specified by the complex laws of thermodynamics. As size increases, efficiency decreases and heat rises. As efficiency decreases, air density decreases, and in turn, the amount of air available for the combustion chamber decreases. The things to be concerned about are horsepower and airflow. Lower boost pressure means that whatever turbo you use will produce less heat and work less hard, but all of this is of little consequence to your engine, which will decide whether to blow itself to pieces or produce a lot of power based on cylinder pressure rather than boost.