This paper investigates the performance of various “turbo” receivers for serially concatenated turbo codes transmitted through intersymbol interference (ISI) channels. Both the inner and outer codes are assumed to be recursive systematic convolutional (RSC) codes. The optimum turbo receiver consists of an (inner) channel maximum a posteriori (MAP) decoder and a MAP decoder for the outer code. The channel MAP decoder operates on a “supertrellis” which incorporates the channel trellis and the trellis for the inner error-correcting code. This is referred to as the MAP receiver employing a SuperTrellis (STMAP). Since the complexity of the supertrellis in the STMAP receiver increases exponentially with the channel length, we propose a simpler but suboptimal receiver that employs the predictive decision feedback equalizer (PDFE). The key idea in this paper is to have the feedforward part of the PDFE outside the iterative loop and incorporate only the feedback part inside the loop. We refer to this receiver as the PDFE-STMAP. The complexity of the supertrellis in the PDFE-STMAP receiver depends on the inner code and the length of the feedback part. Investigations with Proakis B, Proakis C (both channels have spectral nulls with all zeros on the unit circle and hence cannot be converted to a minimum phase channel) and a minimum phase channel reveal that at most two feedback taps are sufficient to get the best performance. A reduced-state STMAP (RS-STMAP) receiver is also derived which employs a smaller supertrellis at the cost of performance.