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Performance Racing Turbo Diverter Valves



What are Diverter Valves and How Do They Work?

A compressor bypass valve, also known as a pressure relief valve or diverter valve, is a manifold vacuum-actuated valve designed to release pressure in the intake system of a turbocharged vehicle when the throttle is lifted or closed. This air pressure is re-circulated back into the non-pressurized end of the intake, right before the turbo, but after the mass airflow sensor.

In contrast, a blow-off valve performs the same task but releases the air into the atmosphere instead of recirculating it. This type of valve is typically an aftermarket modification. The blow-off action produces a range of distinctive hissing sounds, depending on the exit design.

Furthermore, in the diverter valve, the valve release occurs during the lifting or closing of the throttle. Hence, while accelerating and then releasing the throttle, the car makes an air sound. This sound is the air pressure releasing into the intake. Many turbo enthusiasts love this sound, just as a supercharger fans enjoys the high-rev whining. By sending the air back into the intake, it overall benefits the performance of the vehicle.

How it Works

Each time you feather the go pedal on a turbocharged car, as the throttle plate opens up, air goes into the engine. The Turbo compresses the air and drives it into the engine. You let off the throttle if you move. That closes the throttle plate, and the turbo keeps on spinning. The compressor will have less work to do the next time you need it by continuing to spin but the air it was compressing must go somewhere.

The diverter valve takes and recycles the compressed air through the intake tube. The air would have caused the turbo to start spinning backwards if it had not diverted the air as the air was sucked back into it. When your vehicle is tuned for recycling the air after the MAF sensor, the MAF calculates how much will still be in circulation once the throttle is reopened.

The vacuum pressure opens the valve when you are at an idle position. Turbo boost is turned on when the valve is completely closed. By raising the throttle, the boost pressure is released into the air cleaner tube. If the valve is faulty or insufficient, you will experience a lack of boost, an prolonged lag or a slow throttle response. With the installation of an aftermarket diverter valve, those problems go away. You need to bring the diverter valve in if you are operating with a chip as the chip will stress the default valves.

Vivid Racing carries a wide range of performance racing diverter valves for popular European vehicles. Our diverter valves are designed to replace the weak factory diaphragm units with a piston and spring design.  The aftermarket diverter valves help hold the boost consistent in the higher RPM's without leaking or bleeding boost off.  We carry diverter valves from Agency Power, Forge Motorsports, Hyperboost, GFB, AWE Tuning, APR Tuned, EVO, and much more.

Buy online or give one of our world-class professionals a call at 1-480-966-3040.