- 482

- SW Louisiana
- Musical_Artist
I know some cars have twin turbo kits stock, like the premium 300ZX, but, there other cars actually have the ability to use either a single turbo or a twin turbo kit in real life.
The RX7 (FD) for example has aftermarket single turbo kits and aftermarket twin turbo kits available. The differences between a single turbo and a twin turbo are enough (in my opinion) to change the handling characteristics of a car, even if the power ends up being the same for either kit.
Also, there are twin turbo kits available in real life for some cars on GT5 with no forced induction (I think that is the right word) available in the game. These would include a bunch of Lamborghinis and Ferraris currently in GT5.
These are basically the only cars that I really have planned out how the part would be installed that would work correctly.
Murcielago & Murcielago LP670-SV - currently no forced induction kits
Ferrari 458 Italia - currently no forced induction kits
Gallardo LP560-4 - currently no forced induction kits
Ferrari F430 & F430 Scuderia - Currently no forced induction kits.
These are just some of the more notable examples of Twin Turbo kits available.
One issue with these twin turbo kits is that to get real power out of them, the engine needs to be modified. So, here is my solution for that issue:
This plan would only work with cars that currently have no forced induction kits available. This is because the "Engine Tuning" that is currently available in the Engine Tuning area of the garage is for tuning a N/A engine, not a forced induction engine.
I have no plan yet of how Twin Turbo Kits would work for cars with forced induction kits already available to purchase in GT5. But, if we can at least get some forced induction kits to cars that don't have any available, I think that would be a step in a positive direction.
The RX7 (FD) for example has aftermarket single turbo kits and aftermarket twin turbo kits available. The differences between a single turbo and a twin turbo are enough (in my opinion) to change the handling characteristics of a car, even if the power ends up being the same for either kit.
Also, there are twin turbo kits available in real life for some cars on GT5 with no forced induction (I think that is the right word) available in the game. These would include a bunch of Lamborghinis and Ferraris currently in GT5.
These are basically the only cars that I really have planned out how the part would be installed that would work correctly.
Murcielago & Murcielago LP670-SV - currently no forced induction kits
Ferrari 458 Italia - currently no forced induction kits
Gallardo LP560-4 - currently no forced induction kits
Ferrari F430 & F430 Scuderia - Currently no forced induction kits.
These are just some of the more notable examples of Twin Turbo kits available.
One issue with these twin turbo kits is that to get real power out of them, the engine needs to be modified. So, here is my solution for that issue:
- Make "Twin Turbo Kit Engine" a seperate tiered tuning part in the Engine Tuning area of the Tuning Garage.
- With the tier system, this will be the teir classes:
Level 1 Twin Turbo Kit Engine = Install straight to engine.
Level 2 Twin Turbo Kit Engine = Install to Turbo-modified engine.
Level 3 Twin Turbo Kit Engine = Install to Highly Turbo-modified engine. - Make the "Twin Turbo Kit Engine" modifications unable to be uninstalled.
This plan would only work with cars that currently have no forced induction kits available. This is because the "Engine Tuning" that is currently available in the Engine Tuning area of the garage is for tuning a N/A engine, not a forced induction engine.
I have no plan yet of how Twin Turbo Kits would work for cars with forced induction kits already available to purchase in GT5. But, if we can at least get some forced induction kits to cars that don't have any available, I think that would be a step in a positive direction.