Okay, well I'll be interested to hear how it all works. It sounds overly complicated to me and that you're ignoring certain benefits of the SC, and I can see a few other holes in the plan that would be deal breakers if it were my car, but it's not my car so have at 'er.
Specifically, if you're interested:
- The turbo discharge being plumbed to open atmosphere could present an overspeed problem. You'll be pounding a ton of air in using the SC, creating a ton of exhaust gas, and if you don't switch to the turbo in time, it could explode.
- The valves dumping the turbo and connecting it to the plumbing. There will be a time when the plenum is able to dump to atomsphere, during the time that the valve is closing off the turbo dump and connecting it to the intake. At this point your manifold pressure will drop to zero, and since your turbo and intercooler are at atmospheric pressure too, it will take a half step for the boost pressure to recover. There will also be the synchronization between the valve that dumps the turbo compressor to the one that dumps the SC...
- Putting the TB in front of the SC will cause two problems: First off, the SC will be under vacuum part of the time, which isn't really much of a problem unless it starts sucking lube out of the bearings. AFAIK, the Buicks run this way, so it shouldn't be a problem at all unless your seals start to go. The real problem is that if you plumb things the way you're proposing, what's going to control the engine when the turbo is bypassing the SC, and no consumable air is passing through the TB?
- You're giving up many of the benefits of the SC by not using it all the time. Turbo engines built for the street have awful volumetric efficiency because of the crazy exhaust backpressure the turbo puts on the engine. Typically on a 15 psi boost motor, the backpressure will be 30-45 psi. After blowdown (the initial rush of high pressure exhaust when your valve opens) there is always a struggle to get ALL the exhaust out of the cylinder. What's worse is that when the intake valve is opened, there is that 30-45 psi of pressure still trapped in the cylinder, and it's all exhaust gas. This overcomes the 15 psi in the intake manifold and blows out the intake valve, and displaces good, burnable air/fuel. Worse yet is when a camshaft with lots of overlap is used, and that exhaust pressure actually blows right through the cylinder and into the intake, contaminating the charge even further.
With the SC, you'll be contributing to the intake pressure without creating any more exhaust pressure, and you'll either reduce or negate the reversion coming from high exhaust backpressure. This will allow you to use a wilder camshaft and make yet more power, and since you won't be relying too much on a snappy responsive turbo, you can use a bigger turbine than you normally would, which also reduces the exhaust backpressure. These two things alone should more than overcome the power lost to driving the SC.
- There is still the question of how are you going to control the switchover between turbo and super chargers. Are you going to use an RPM sensor on the turbo compressor to know when it's spinning fast enough to take over? Are you just going to rely on engine RPM or boost pressure, hoping that everything behaves linearly and instantly no matter what gear you're in and what load you've got on things? If you're going to do it mechanically and on the cheap (as it sounds, by your questions about CBV valves) what's going to control the pressure signal to the valves?
But those are my thoughts. The simplest and probably best thing would be for you to get a really well designed header, a properly sized turbo, and forget about the rest. It sounds like you're doing this as an engineering exercise, so simplicity isn't really in the cards for you. I would still go with turbo -> intercooler -> throttle body -> super charger -> maybe water injection -> intake, without any funkyness in between. It'll be hard enough getting all that working harmoniously without adding any other complication.
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