Originally Posted By: TC
Back in the early 1980s when I first started track racing, turbos, even OEM turbos, were a bit more quirky, and spin-down was a more common concern. Much of this can be traced to heat. Some turbos then were oil-cooled, rather than H20 cooled, occasionally threatening temperatures comparable to Hades, or at least the surface of the sun. To shut down a mega-hot, still-spinning turbo without oil circulating could be problematic. They even marketed special "turbo" motor oils back in the day, even if that was mostly a marketing gimmick. But modern OEM turbos generally don’t go “Three Mile Island” like in the old days due to more effective cooling. Nowadays most turbos are refined to the point where they're basically....well, invisible.
This paragraph brings back some memories. I owned an '85 Pontiac Sunbird Turbo for 14 years and ran it in autocrosses, time trials, and track days the whole time. When I first got the car, I ran 10w30 Valvoline Turbo V, then switched to M1 5 or 10w30 after the first couple of years. This engine did not have a water-cooled bearing housing, so I was always careful to let it idle down for a couple of minutes after a lapping session or autocross run.
Chrysler's 2.2L turbo of the same era was well-regarded for having a water-cooled bearing housing, but in my opinion it was necessary because the turbo was mounted behind the engine, where cooling airflow was insufficient. The turbo on my Sunbird was mounted on the front of the engine, right behind the electric radiator fan. Over the years, I never lost the turbo due to bearing coking, but I did lose the original turbo when the snap ring holding the turbine housing to the bearing housing broke, and allowed the turbine wheel to rub on the turbine housing. This caused a LOT of turbo lag.
The worst thing about the engine was the exhaust manifold. I cracked two of the original-design welded tubular manifolds, and finally replaced it with the thick-wall cast exhaust manifold that was on the 2.0L turbo's in the last year of production.