Honest question: how much have turbo 1UZ builds actually evolved since 2015?

The  1UZFE EGR Delete Kit  is available for sale here.

lexboosted

New Member
I've been in the UZ world since the beginning and I see the same arguments cycling through every few years. Same debates about head studs, fuel system thresholds, manifold orientation, ECU choice.

What I want to know from the people actively building right now: what's genuinely different in 2026 vs 10 years ago? Not marketing different, actually different. Better turbos at the same price point? Standalones that finally tune these well out of the box? Parts that used to be unobtainable that are now on the shelf?

And the flip side: what hasn't changed at all even though people keep claiming it has?

Curious where the real progress is and where the noise is.
 
Good question and one I think about a lot. Active builder here, currently on a turbo VVTi build, been at this on and off since around forver.

What's actually different in 2026:

Turbos at the budget tier are dramatically better. The G-series Garretts and the various billet-wheel options from EFR and the better Chinese factories (Pulsar, etc.) put what used to be $2500 turbo performance in the $1200-1500 range. Spool, efficiency island, durability, all genuinely improved. This is the single biggest change.

Standalone ECU tuning of the 1UZ is finally a solved problem. Haltech Elite, Link G4X, even MaxxECU now have base maps and known-good setups for the 1UZ that work without two months of bench tuning. Ten years ago you were soldering and praying.

Welded/cast log manifolds in stainless are available off the shelf at reasonable prices instead of being one-off fabrication. T4 twin-scroll options exist for the 1UZ that didn't ten years ago.

Coil-on-plug conversion kits are mature. The DIY harness adapters and known coil choices (R35, LS truck, etc.) are documented to the point that nobody should be running the stock distributor on a serious build anymore.

What hasn't actually changed despite the noise:

Head studs. People still argue about ARP vs OEM as if it's an active debate. The answer is the same as it was in 2012. Stock studs are fine up to a known boost ceiling, ARP is cheap insurance, just do it.

Fuel system thresholds. The 550cc/750cc/1000cc injector breakpoints are the same numbers they always were. Physics didn't change. People keep "discovering" what was already documented.

Bottom end limits. Stock internals still let go in the same places under the same conditions. The "I've seen 800whp on stock internals" guy in 2026 is the same guy who existed in 2016 and 2006. He's not wrong, but the average outcome hasn't shifted.

The noise vs. real progress question: most of the "this changes everything" parts and tunes that get hyped on Instagram are incremental at best. The real progress is boring stuff like better budget turbos and ECUs that just work. The hype stuff is mostly noise.

My rwo cents anyway.
 
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