Sunday, December 7, 2008

Turbocharger vs Supercharger - Part 4 of 4

Positive Displacement/Roots Supercharger (Ex:Stillen)
Used by the Chevy Cobalt, Comptech's NSX kit and Jackson Racing's infamous Honda kits, the positive displacement supercharger is the third most popularly used aftermarket forced induction design. Identified by its chunky, ribbed design, the positive displacement supercharger, commonly referred to as the Roots-type blower, is represented in the 350Z arena by Stillen.

Turbo Vs Supercharger Stillen Heat Exchanger.JPG
The intercooler look-like in the front bumper
is actually the heat exchanger for
the Stillen air-to-water intercooler setup.
This unit chills down the water that
cools the air intake charge.
Also note the bulge in the hood,
which is necessary to clear the blower unit.


Stillen's supercharger is belt and pulley driven, much like Vortech's centrifugal unit. The difference is that intake air entering the Stillen blower isn't actually compressed, rather it's gathered, funneled and pushed into the engine, generating positive pressure, i.e. boost, as the air backs up in the intake manifold. Stillen sells kits up to Stage 4, with Stage 3 and Stage 4 utilizing smaller pulleys that allow the blower unit to spin faster, pushing more air and generating more boost. The Stillen Stage 2 kit utilizes an air-to-water intercooler system, which consists of a front-mount radiator that runs coolant piping through the air gathered by the blower unit, cooling it without having to fill the snakelike piping of a front-mount air-to-air intercooler setup.

Turbo Vs Supercharger Stillen Supercharger.JPG
This is the underside of the Stillen blower;
dead center is the exit for the air
funneled by the twin rotors.
To the left is the black actuator,
which controls the built-in bypass valve.


Once installed, the Stillen blower replaces
the upper intake plenum and rests right on top of the 350Z's engine.


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