83mm Pulley without Headers
Trending Topics
The Best of Mercedes & AMG
How many miles are on your car, OP? Is maintenance up to date? If yes and if done correctly with cooling in place, you will not have problems with an 83 and intake temps.
You do not need headers to add an 83mm. Anybody that says that does not have enough experience with these cars. My third 2006, I owned two other 2006 before. I've done all the mods, some left out and won't do again, some same as I did on this one. Having said that, this is not taking away anything from long tubes. This car's bottleneck are 100% the manifolds. From all the E55s I've owned, thousands and thousands of miles with just an upper 83mm and stock manifolds, no issues - and I romp on this daily car a lot.
Your reliability depends on the tune (air/fuel) more than anything else once you add an upper pulley... headers do not 'add' reliability nor take away from it. They simply make it easier to make the power (less boost/boost loss).
Lastly, just because I am in a good mood today - stay away from any and all throttle body upgrades. Some people swear by them and have success (I guess everyone's idea of success is different) but I don't care what anyone else says, they cause headaches and problems left and right. Serious or subtle, if not immediately, eventually.
Last edited by ArmoE55; Feb 2, 2023 at 03:51 PM.
-83mm Pulley swap with tune, no other modifications needed BUT a Bosch 010 pump and a bigger heat exchanger definitely recommended.
-77mm Pulley swap with tune, heat exchanger and 010 pump upgrade at minimum. Some shops also recommend larger injectors. Headers, preferably LT help with the back pressure and nice bump in hp.
These are results of just pulley swaps from a well know shop in England.
In order to test the pulley we decided to use the same car and ran it in 3 states of set up;
1) Stock - 423.7bhp / 475lb/ft (500 / 561)
2) 83mm -480.5bhp / 532.66lb/ft (567 / 629)
3) 77mm -509.3bhp / 596.80lb/ft (601 / 704)
1) Stock (OEM supercharger pulley)
2) Euro-charged 83mm supercharger pulley (X pipe fitted in place of secondary cats and resonator removed)
3) As above with 77mm Supercharger pulley
The power and torque figures at the wheels were as follows (flywheel in brackets);
[img]data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAAAAAP///yH5BAEAAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAIBRAA7[/img]

https://forums.mbclub.co.uk/threads/...o-test.189064/
Last edited by Fountain35; Feb 10, 2023 at 02:11 PM.




You do not need headers to add an 83mm. Anybody that says that does not have enough experience with these cars. My third 2006, I owned two other 2006 before. I've done all the mods, some left out and won't do again, some same as I did on this one. Having said that, this is not taking away anything from long tubes. This car's bottleneck are 100% the manifolds. From all the E55s I've owned, thousands and thousands of miles with just an upper 83mm and stock manifolds, no issues - and I romp on this daily car a lot.
Your reliability depends on the tune (air/fuel) more than anything else once you add an upper pulley... headers do not 'add' reliability nor take away from it. They simply make it easier to make the power (less boost/boost loss).
Lastly, just because I am in a good mood today - stay away from any and all throttle body upgrades. Some people swear by them and have success (I guess everyone's idea of success is different) but I don't care what anyone else says, they cause headaches and problems left and right. Serious or subtle, if not immediately, eventually.
If you use the 80mm throttle body (which is in fact a 78mm diameter) there will be no issues. Those throttle bodies came stock on our engines in the SL55 evo, G55 and clk dtm. The M273 82mm ones are problematic though.
Personally I prefer stockish pulleys, which make less torque, which makes the car more driveable in practical use. With 900Nm torque,, most of it will go into wheelspin aka burnt rubber. Also less stress on the gearbox.
In summary, 83mm with stock headers will work, but adding better headers would be advisable.






