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PostSubject: Great exhaust articles   Great exhaust articles EmptyWed Oct 24, 2007 12:40 pm

This article is great. I think everyone should read it.
http://www.popularhotrodding.com/enginemasters/articles/hardcore/0505em_exh
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PostSubject: Re: Great exhaust articles   Great exhaust articles EmptyFri Nov 14, 2008 1:35 pm

Definitely an informative article if you're doing an ehaust.

Anyone know where to get the CFM flow figures for different size pipes? I know a 2.5" diameter pipe flows ~500 CFM, but that' s it. There ought to be a table with that data somewhere.

Albertj
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PostSubject: Re: Great exhaust articles   Great exhaust articles EmptyFri Nov 14, 2008 5:33 pm

There is also good articles in the "Technical Section" on Supercharging/Turbocharging, Upgrading Brakes and the science behind it, Cylinder Head Porting and more.
Good find. I've been doing a lot of reading and copying of these articles.
Thanks for the tip.
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PostSubject: Re: Great exhaust articles   Great exhaust articles EmptyWed Feb 18, 2009 12:54 am

Another interesting article, with main focus on turbo application, but note the mention of supercharged engines:

Link: http://www.max-boost.co.uk/max-boost/exhaust/exhaust.htm

Copied relevant portions below:

Backpressure: Friend or Foe?


There are two schools of thought, both fiercely battling for world domination:

One says that exhaust backpressure is an 'evil thing' and it has to be eliminated here and now. The other one says that some backpressure is needed by the engine, to run smoothly and efficiently

The 'evil' dudes counterattack with the argument that 'how can it be good for breathing to have flow resistance', for that's what backpressure is. The 'moderates' reply that if you dump the whole exhaust it won't run much better, it will be lumpy and erratic.

Who's right and who's wrong? Can they both be right (or wrong?)

Of course they can - they are generalising, and it's unavoidable for both schools to be right in some cases and wrong in others.

Let's start from the beginning...


There is no single figure for exhaust backpressure. It varies dramatically depending mainly on engine speed and less on engine load. Typically it's almost zero at idle, and a fraction of a psi at midrange. As we approach high revs it shoots up quickly and at full revs it can be quite a few psi. When we refer to 'exhaust backpressure' that would imply full revs and full throttle.

On a n/a engine the intake also experiences some 'backpressure', which follows a similar pattern but is overall of much lower amplitude. "Backpressure" by the way is a catch-all term technically incorrect, but I'll use it nonetheless.

A (mechanically) supercharged engine will have an exhaust backpressure pattern similar to the n/a version, but all figures will be a bit higher, as more exhaust gases are trying to flow from the same-old exhaust.

A turbocharged engine will probably have a huge mother of a restrictor before the exhaust even starts. It's called a turbine, and it squeezes and upsets the outgoing gasflow like you'd never believe. Stock, OEM turbo designs have exhaust housings that are VERY restrictive, squeezing the air through a tiny passage, trying to make it give away all it's energy to spin the turbine. (low A/R ratios, but let's keep it simple here). If you want boost at low-mid revs, then the pre-turbine chamber must be squeezed like a garden hose trying to get the neighbours wet. That restricts flow big time, several psi worth of drop and we're still at midrange revs. At full revs this restriction is much higher, and that's even before the exhaust pipes contribute their own share of backpressure.

Race-preped turbos run high A/R housings, which means that the turbine wheel might be bigger, but the housing around it is FAR bigger, you can stick your finger in there. That improves flow immensely, especially at high revs. In fact, half of the air molecules may get through the turbo without even touching the turbine. This leads to low backpressure all right, but if they haven't tried to spin the turbine, who's gonna do it? Hence the 'race' turbos don't make boost until 5K rpm

Then we have the 'hybrids' and the modified turbos, somewhere in the middle (much closer to OEM, really)

OK, enough popular mechanics, why should we care what the backpressure is?

One issue is the interaction between the cam timing and the exhaust.

As we saw back in the "cams" section, during overlap both exhaust and inlet valves are open for a short while. This means that stuff could flow either way. We don't want it move the wrong way. We either want everything to stay in place, or move a bit towards the exhaust. That would encourage fresh (cool) mixture to wash out the remaining crap from the combustion chambers, push the old rubbish away and cool the valves a bit (at the expense of higher fuel consumption and emissions)

If it goes the 'wrong' way then some crap will remain in the chambers and some will go back to the intake port. This will preheat the ports, the intake valves and the whole chamber in general. It will also displace fresh mixture, contaminating what we're trying to burn. Preheating the area it also decreases the density of the mixture that DID make it into the chambers. This happens a lot actually, that's one of the reasons why VE is so much below 100%.

Race engines of yesteryears used to run loads of overlap. At some revs this exhaust gas reversion would be really nasty, because exhaust pressure waves would stuff the burnt gases back into the carbs. But at other revs (max torque revs) these same pressure waves would suck out the burnt gases, creating a vacuum below atmospheric, pulling in the fresh mixture in. VolumetricEfficiency at those revs was 110-120%. The ridiculous overlap wouldn't let them idle properly, and at low revs they were hopeless, but race engines are meant to be full-throttle all day long, so that wasn't an issue. Fuel consumption and emissions weren't a problem either, but they are now, and OEMs go for minimal overlaps nowadays.

Back to turbos: There's this notion that overlap lets the boost get away straight to the exhaust. This is perpetuated by 'tuners' and 'experts', so ordinary folk treat it as gospel. Some books on turbocharging also fuel this fire.

At last, let the TRUTH be told!

Here is a list of fallacies on the subject:

1. On n/a engines the intake is sucked in and the exhaust gases are pushed out by the explosions. That's why intake valves are always bigger.

2. Turbos leak boost during overlap

3. A totally free-flowing exhaust can only help a turbo spin faster. There cannot be any downside to this.

There are more, but you get the picture. The reason this stuff prevails is because it 'sounds right'. Hey, it's conventional wisdom, it MUST be right. That's a good excuse for Joe Public, but specialist tuners should know better than that. How many of them have actually ever measured exhaust backpressure? Ask them to show you how they did it. There are 'gotchas' when you first try it, but once the adaptor is made, it can be used time and again. If they haven't ever measured intake and/or exhaust backpressure they're just repeating the age-old crap I keep reading in books and articles allover. But because the 'tuner' said so, it gains even more credibility. He then sells you some Slick50 to eliminate any friction between you two.

Let's look at the above gospels more closely:

1. First of all there are no explosions in the combustion chambers. If there are, then we have a problem and the engine won't last long. What we strive for is controlled burn of the mixture. We want everything to happen in an orderly manner, with no hanky-panky before the spark plug fires and no rush for cover as the flame propagates. We don't want the high chamber pressures (after the burn) to be used to push the exhaust gases out of the way. We're not in the fireworks business, we want the energy to be used to push the piston downwards!

Everything has to be timed so that the last drop of energy is squeezed onto the piston. There's only one power stroke in a 4-stroke engine, let's get value from it! Neither do we want the piston to push the exhaust gases out during the exhaust stroke, because that would be energy lost from the crank. We've got enough losses as it is, everything tries to drain energy from the crank, but this is not SSEnterprise.

Therefore an optimised engine strikes a balance on when and how easily the exhaust gases will be gone. The result is that in practice the intake/exhaust pressures are fairly similar.

2. How can someone know whether a turbo leaks boost during overlap? Do they stick their hand beside the valves and feel the breeze? Sweeping statement that.

Again, it's the inlet/exhaust pressure ratio that dictates where the flow will tend to be. Measure these, and you know. If an engine sees 20psi at the intake and 30psi backpressure at the exhaust, is it gonna leak boost during overlap? I don't think so. It will leak boost when the intake shows 5psi and the exhaust 2psi. It's still the same engine, you know, just different rev/load combinations.

At high boost pressures there is almost 1 bar more backpressure than boost. That's a lot of reversion! This refers to a standard KKK and exhaust manifold, but it wouldn't be much better with a straight-through exhaust, or even a hybrid. For serious power, a larger A/R ratio is needed here.

Supercharged engines tend to have intake pressure generally higher than exhaust backpressure.

In that case you know that increasing overlap will shove boost straight through the exhaust. Some of this may be beneficial actually, cooling the valves a bit.

Turbocharged engines are totally different beasts. Exhaust backpressure rises rapidly right after the max torque revs, while boost pressure doesn't. The result: reversion. But before max torque revs, intake manifold pressure is higher than exhaust backpressure - boost leak territory.

Change the exhaust and ditch the cat, and the whole balance may change - raising the rev point where boost leak stops and reversion rears it's ugly head.

That's why generalisations and sweeping 'expert' statements can be embarrassing later on.

3. OK now, how on earth can a free-flow exhaust fail to help the turbo spin faster? Surely there's no downside to this one. Take a stock turbo car, fit a bleed valve, fit a 4" downpipe with no backbox, and you're King of the Hill.

...Boost spikes anyone? The main way to control boost is through the 'integrated' wastegate.

Yes, they are proudly advertised as a bonus, when in reality they're a miserable compromise of low-cost and low-flow. The wastegate typically sits next to the turbine and as it opens up exhaust gases are diverted from the turbine's way. For the same opening of the wastegate valve, flow is controlled by the backpressure after the turbine. The 'freer' the turbine spins, the less of an incentive for the gases to go around the wastegate. A 4" straight-through pipe will seriously diminish the wastegate's effectiveness. If the car is running high boost as well, then the stock crappy wastegate is under even more pressure.

The result is boost spikes, that can allow the turbine shaft to spin momentarily far faster than designed. Doesn't help reliability.

But I've got a boost gauge, I hear you cry. I don't see no spikes.

I've got news for you: Your boost gauge is heavily dampened. If it were not, it would be unreadable, the needle jumping up and down continuously. The spikes are evened out in the gauge's damping fluid, what you see is an average value. Oops.

Can a free-flow exhaust reduce efficiency?

Actually, it can. The efficiency of a turbocharged engine relies heavily on the cylinder head operating at the right temperatures - more precisely the gases between the exhaust valves and the silencer (or cat). The speed and temperature of these gases dictate the force that will drive the turbine. If the gases are too slow or too cold then the turbine isn't driven as hard as it could be, resulting in increased backpressure and a slower compressor (less boost).

An exhaust that is *too* free-flowing can result in the engine feeling 'gutless' at the bottom of the rev range. This is not always placebo, the gases leaving too early result in lower exhaust gas temps, therefore lower torque produced at those engine revs. This is only the case at low revs, because the very same exhaust design also results in higher flow at high revs, and lower EGTs there too. The only difference is that the lower EGTs are now welcome, because they are pushed below the maximum (safe point), while at low revs they were below the minimum (efficiency point).

Such an engine will produce improved max bhp figures, but looking closely it will be apparent that it's at the expense of low-down power. Once it's recognised however, it can be fixed - exhaust wrapping could help bring EGTs back up again, while the free-flowing exhaust can retain the max flow potential. Best of both worlds.

_________________
'05 GTO 6.0L • 6-spd • 95k miles • 0-60: 4.8s • 16.9 avg MPG • Nelson Ledges Lap: 1:26

'95 Celica GT 2.2L • 5-spd • 165k miles • 0-60: yes

'98 SC Riviera • 281k miles • 298 HP/370 TQ • 0-60: 5.79s • ET: 13.97 @ 99.28 • 4087 lb • 20.1 avg MPG • Nelson Ledges Lap: 1:30
3.4" pulley • AL104 plugs • 180º t-stat • FWI w/K&N • 1.9:1 rockers • OR pushrods • LS6 valve springs • SLP headers • ZZP fuel rails
KYB GR2 struts • MaxAir shocks • Addco sway bars • UMI bushings • GM STB • Enkei 18" EV5s w/ Dunlop DZ101s • F-body calipers
EBC bluestuff/Hawk HP plus • SS lines • Brembo slotted discs • DHP tuned • Aeroforce • Hidden Hitch

^^^ SOLD ^^^ frown

'70 Ninety-Eight Holiday Coupe 455cid • 116k miles
^^^ SOLD ^^^ frown
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PostSubject: Re: Great exhaust articles   Great exhaust articles EmptyWed Feb 18, 2009 1:07 am

How do exhaust headers work to improve engine performance?

Link: http://www.howstuffworks.com/question172.htm

Headers are one of the easiest bolt-on accessories you can use to improve an engine's performance. The goal of headers is to make it easier for the engine to push exhaust gases out of the cylinders.

When you look at the four-stroke cycle in How Car Engines Work, you can see that the engine produces all of its power during the power stroke. The gasoline in the cylinder burns and expands during this stroke, generating power. The other three strokes are necessary evils required to make the power stroke possible. If these three strokes consume power, they are a drain on the engine.

During the exhaust stroke, a good way for an engine to lose power is through back pressure. The exhaust valve opens at the beginning of the exhaust stroke, and then the piston pushes the exhaust gases out of the cylinder. If there is any amount of resistance that the piston has to push against to force the exhaust gases out, power is wasted. Using two exhaust valves rather than one improves the flow by making the hole that the exhaust gases travel through larger.

In a normal engine, once the exhaust gases exit the cylinder they end up in the exhaust manifold. In a four-cylinder or eight-cylinder engine, there are four cylinders using the same manifold. From the manifold, the exhaust gases flow into one pipe toward the catalytic converter and the ­muffler. It turns out that the manifold can be an important source of back pressure because exhaust gases from one cylinder build up pressure in the manifold that affects the next cylinder that uses the manifold.

The idea behind an exhaust header is to eliminate the manifold's back pressure. Instead of a common manifold that all of the cylinders share, each cylinder gets its own exhaust pipe. These pipes come together in a larger pipe called the collector. The individual pipes are cut and bent so that each one is the same length as the others. By making them the same length, it guarantees that each cylinder's exhaust gases arrive in the collector spaced out equally so there is no back pressure generated by the cylinders sharing the collector.

------------

_________________
'05 GTO 6.0L • 6-spd • 95k miles • 0-60: 4.8s • 16.9 avg MPG • Nelson Ledges Lap: 1:26

'95 Celica GT 2.2L • 5-spd • 165k miles • 0-60: yes

'98 SC Riviera • 281k miles • 298 HP/370 TQ • 0-60: 5.79s • ET: 13.97 @ 99.28 • 4087 lb • 20.1 avg MPG • Nelson Ledges Lap: 1:30
3.4" pulley • AL104 plugs • 180º t-stat • FWI w/K&N • 1.9:1 rockers • OR pushrods • LS6 valve springs • SLP headers • ZZP fuel rails
KYB GR2 struts • MaxAir shocks • Addco sway bars • UMI bushings • GM STB • Enkei 18" EV5s w/ Dunlop DZ101s • F-body calipers
EBC bluestuff/Hawk HP plus • SS lines • Brembo slotted discs • DHP tuned • Aeroforce • Hidden Hitch

^^^ SOLD ^^^ frown

'70 Ninety-Eight Holiday Coupe 455cid • 116k miles
^^^ SOLD ^^^ frown
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PostSubject: Re: Great exhaust articles   Great exhaust articles EmptyWed Feb 18, 2009 1:11 am

Can You Tell Me About Exhaust Systems?

Link: http://www.nsxprime.com/FAQ/Miscellaneous/exhausttheory.htm

We've seen too much misinformation regarding exhaust theory. What kind of misinformation? For starters, there are a lot of people in the "Bigger is Better" camp. We're talking about exhaust pipe diameters. Even the big magazine editors are boldly smattering statements like, "For a turbo car, you can't get an exhaust pipe that's too big." Also, terms like "back pressure" and the statement, "An engine needs back pressure to run properly!" really rub us the wrong way.

Let's start from the beginning. What is an exhaust system? Silly question? Not hardly. Exhaust systems carry out several functions. Among them are: (1) Getting hot, noxious exhaust gasses from your engine to a place away from the engine compartment; (2) Significantly attenuating noise output from the engine; and (3) In the case of modern cars, reduce exhaust emissions.
Hardware

In order to give you a really good idea of what makes up an exhaust system, let's start with what exhaust gas travels through to get out of your car, as well as some terms and definitions:

After your air/fuel mixture (or nitrous/fuel mixture) burns, you will obviously have some leftovers consisting of a few unburned hydrocarbons (fuel), carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, nitrogen oxides, sulfur dioxide, phosphorus, and the occasional molecule of a heavy metal, such as lead or molybdenum. These are all in gaseous form, and will be under a lot of pressure as the piston rushes them out of the cylinder and into the exhaust manifold or header. They will also be hotter 'n Hades. (After all, this was the explosion of an air/fuel mixture, right?) An exhaust manifold is usually made of cast iron, and its' primary purpose is to funnel several exhaust ports into one, so you don't need four exhaust pipes sticking out the back of your Civic.

Exhaust manifolds are usually pretty restrictive to the flow of exhaust gas, and thus waste a lot of power because your pistons have to push on the exhaust gasses pretty hard to get them out. So why does virtually every new automobile sold have exhaust manifolds? Because they are cheap to produce, and easy to install. Real cheap. Real easy. Like me.

"Ok," you ask, "so now what?" Ah, good thing you asked. The performance alternative to the exhaust manifold is a header. What's the difference? Where a manifold usually has several holes converging into a common chamber to route all your gasses, a header has precisely formed tubes that curve gently to join your exhaust ports to your exhaust pipe. How does this help? First of all, as with any fluid, exhaust gasses must be treated gently for maximum horsepower production. You don't want to just slam-bang exhaust gas from your engine into the exhaust system. No way, Jo-se'! Just as the body of your '94 Eclipse is beautiful, swoopy, and aerodynamic, so must be the inside of your exhaust system.

Secondly, a header can be "tuned" to slightly alter your engines' characteristics. We'll go in-depth into header tuning a little later.

Nextly, exhaust gasses exit from your manifold or header, travel through a bit of pipe, then end up in the catalytic converter, or "cat". The cat's main job is to help clean up some of the harmful chemicals from your exhaust gas so they don't end up in your lungs. In most cars, they also do a great job of quieting things down and giving any exhaust system a deeper, mellow tone. You'll see a lot of Self-Proclaimed Master Technicians (SPMT's) telling people that removing a cat will get you tons of power. There's room for debate on this, but in our experience, removing a catalytic converter from a new car won't gain you much in the horsepower department. It can also get you a $1500 fine if the EPA finds out! If you drive an OBD-II equipped car, you'll also get that damn annoying CHECK ENGINE light burnin' up your dashboard. (And for all you racers concerned with OBD-II's fabled "limp mode", you can put your fears to rest.)

From the catalytic converter, the exhaust gasses go through a bit more pipe and then into a muffler, or system consisting of several mufflers and/or resonators.

Mufflers

Exhaust gases leave the engine under extremely high pressure. If we allowed exhaust gasses escape to the atmosphere directly from the exhaust port, you can well imagine how loud and cop-attracting the noise would be. For the same reason gunshots are loud, engine exhaust is loud. Sure, it might be cool to drive around on the street with that testosterone producing, chest-thumping, 150 decibel roar coming from your car… for about 5.3 seconds. (Not 5.2 or 5.4 seconds… 5.3.) Even the gentleman's gentleman has gotta use a muffler, or system of mufflers, on their exhaust.

Again, you may hear a few SPMT's tell you that "Borla mufflers make horsepower!" Or "An engine needs some backpressure to run properly!" Nonsense. A muffler can no more "make" horsepower than Wile E. Coyote can catch roadrunners. Any technician with any dyno experience will tell you that the best mufflers are no mufflers at all!

Types of Mufflers

Mufflers can take care of the silencing chores by three major methods: Absorption, Restriction, and Reflection. Mufflers can use one method, or all three, to attenuate sound that is not so pleasing to the ears of the Highway Patrol.

The absorption method is probably the least effective at quelling engine roar, but the benefit is that "absorbers" are also best at letting exhaust gas through. Good examples of absorbers are the mufflers found in GReddy BL-series exhausts, DynoMax UltraFlow, and the good old-fashioned Cherry Bomb glasspack.

Absorption mufflers are also the simplest. All of the above named mufflers utilize a simple construction consisting of a perforated tube that goes through a can filled with a packing material, such as fiberglass or steel wool. This is similar to simply punching holes in your exhaust pipe, then wrapping it up with insulation. Neat, huh?

Another trick absorption mufflers use to kill off noise is, well, tricky. For example, the Hooker Aero Chamber muffler is a straight-through design, with a catch. Instead of a simple, perforated tube, there is a chamber inside the muffler that is much larger than the rest of the exhaust pipe. This design abates sound more efficiently than your standard straight-through because when the exhaust gasses enter this large chamber they slow down dramatically. This gives them more time to dwell in the sound insulation, and thus absorb more noise. The large chamber gently tapers back into the smaller size of your exhaust pipe, and the exhaust gasses are sent on their merry way to the tailpipe.

Restriction


Doesn't that word just make your skin crawl? It's right up there in the same league with words like "maim" and "rape".

Obviously, a restrictive muffler doesn't require much engineering expertise, and is almost always the least expensive to manufacture. Thus, we find restrictive mufflers on almost all OEM exhaust systems. We won't waste much time on the restrictive muffler except to say that if you got 'em, you might not want to flaunt 'em.

Reflection

Probably the most sophisticated type of muffler is the reflector. They often utilize absorption principles in conjunction with reflection to make the ultimate high-performance silencer. Remember any of your junior high school math? Specifically, that like numbers cancel each other when on a criss-cross? That's the same principal used by the reflective muffler. Sound is a wave. And when two like waves collide, they will "cancel" each other and leave nothing to call a corpse but a spot of low-grade heat.

There are numerous engineering tricks used in the reflective muffler. Hedman Hedders makes a muffler that looks a lot like a glasspack. In fact, it is a glasspack with a catch. The outer casing is sized just-so, so that high-pitched engine sound (what we deem "noise") is reflected back into the core of the muffler… where those sound waves meet their maker as they slam right into a torrent of more sound waves of like wavelength coming straight from the engine. And, this muffler is packed with a lot of fiberglass to help absorb any straggling noise that might be lagging behind.

The Exhaust Pulse

To gain a more complete understanding of how mufflers and headers do their job, we must be familiar with the dynamics of the exhaust pulse itself. Exhaust gas does not come out of the engine in one continuous stream. Since exhaust valves open and close, exhaust gas will flow, then stop, and then flow again as the exhaust valve opens. The more cylinders you have, the closer together these pulses run.

Keep in mind that for a "pulse" to move, the leading edge must be of a higher pressure than the surrounding atmosphere. The "body" of a pulse is very close to ambient pressure, and the tail end of the pulse is lower than ambient. It is so low, in fact, that it is almost a complete vacuum! The pressure differential is what keeps a pulse moving. A good Mr. Wizard experiment to illustrate this is a coffee can with the metal ends cut out and replaced with the plastic lids. Cut a hole in one of the lids, point it toward a lit candle and thump on the other plastic lid. What happens? The candle flame jumps, then blows out! The "jump" is caused by the high-pressure bow of the pulse we just created, and the candle goes out because the trailing portion of the pulse doesn't have enough oxygen-containing air to support combustion. Neat, huh?

Ok, now that we know that exhaust gas is actually a series of pulses, we can use this knowledge to propagate the forward-motion to the tailpipe. How? Ah, more of the engineering tricks we are so fond of come in to play here.

Just as Paula Abdul will tell you that opposites attract, the low pressure tail end of an exhaust pulse will most definitely attract the high-pressure bow of the following pulse, effectively "sucking" it along. This is what's so cool about a header. The runners on a header are specifically tuned to allow our exhaust pulses to "line up" and "suck" each other along! Whoa, bet you didn't know that! This brings up a few more issues, since engines rev at various speeds, the exhaust pulses don't always exactly line up. Thus, the reason for the Try-Y header, a 4-into-1 header, etc. Most Honda headers are tuned to make the most horsepower in high RPM ranges; usually 4,500 to 6,500 RPM. A good 4-into-1 header, such as the ones sold by Gude, are optimal for that high winding horsepower you've always dreamed of. What are exhaust manifolds and stock exhaust systems good for? Besides a really cheap boat anchor? If you think about it, you'll realize that since stock exhausts are so good at restricting that they'll actually ram the exhaust pulses together and actually make pretty darn good low-end torque! Something to keep in mind, though, is that even though an OEM exhaust may make gobs of low-end torque, they are not the most efficient setup overall, since your engine has to work so hard to expel those exhaust gasses. Also, a header does a pretty good job of additionally "sucking" more exhaust from your combustion chamber, so on the next intake stroke there's lots more fresh air to burn. Think of it this way: At 8,000 RPM, your Integra GS-R is making 280 pulses per second. There's a lot more to be gained by minimizing pumping losses as this busy time than optimizing torque production during the slow season.

_________________
'05 GTO 6.0L • 6-spd • 95k miles • 0-60: 4.8s • 16.9 avg MPG • Nelson Ledges Lap: 1:26

'95 Celica GT 2.2L • 5-spd • 165k miles • 0-60: yes

'98 SC Riviera • 281k miles • 298 HP/370 TQ • 0-60: 5.79s • ET: 13.97 @ 99.28 • 4087 lb • 20.1 avg MPG • Nelson Ledges Lap: 1:30
3.4" pulley • AL104 plugs • 180º t-stat • FWI w/K&N • 1.9:1 rockers • OR pushrods • LS6 valve springs • SLP headers • ZZP fuel rails
KYB GR2 struts • MaxAir shocks • Addco sway bars • UMI bushings • GM STB • Enkei 18" EV5s w/ Dunlop DZ101s • F-body calipers
EBC bluestuff/Hawk HP plus • SS lines • Brembo slotted discs • DHP tuned • Aeroforce • Hidden Hitch

^^^ SOLD ^^^ frown

'70 Ninety-Eight Holiday Coupe 455cid • 116k miles
^^^ SOLD ^^^ frown


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PostSubject: Re: Great exhaust articles   Great exhaust articles EmptyWed Feb 18, 2009 1:13 am

continued from above:


General Rules of Thumb with Headers


You will undoubtedly see a variety of headers at your local speed shop. While you won't be able to determine the optimal power range of the headers by eyeballing them, you'll find that in general, the best high-revving horsepower can be had with headers utilizing larger diameter, shorter primary tubes. Headers with smaller, longer primaries will get you slightly better fuel economy and better street driveability. With four cylinder engines, these are also usually of the Tri-Y design, such as the DC Sports and Lightspeed headers.

Do Mufflers "Make" Horsepower?


The answer, simply, is no. The most efficient mufflers can only employ the same scavenging effect as a header, to help slightly overcome the loss of efficiency introduced into the system as back pressure. But I have yet to see an engine that made more power with a muffler than an open header exhaust. "So," you ask, "what the hell is the best flowing muffler I can buy?"

According to the flowbench, two of the best flowing units you can buy are the Walker Dyno Max and the Cyclone Sonic. They even slightly out flow the straight through designs from HKS and GReddy BL series. Amongst the worst, are the Thrush Turbo and Flow Master mufflers. We'll flow some of the newer mufflers as they become available at our local Chief auto.

Resonators

On your typical cat-back exhaust system, you'll see a couple of bulges in the piping that are apparently mini-mufflers out to help the big muffler that hangs out back. These are called Helmholtz Resonators and are very similar to glasspacks. The main difference is that firstly, there is no sound-absorbing fiberglass or steel wool in a Resonator. And secondly, their main method of silencing is the reflective principle, not absorption. An easy way to tell the difference between a glasspack and a true Helmholtz Resonator is to "ping" one with your finger. A glasspack will make a dull thud, and a true Resonator will make a clear "ping!" sound.

Turbos

Another object that might be sitting in your exhaust flow is a turbine from a turbocharger. If that is the case, we envy you.

Not only that, but turbos introduce a bit of backpressure to your exhaust system, thus making it a bit quieter. All of the typical scavenging rules still apply, but with a twist. Mufflers work really well now! Remember, one of the silencing methods is restriction, and a turbine is just that, a restriction.

This is actually where the term "turbo muffler" is coined. Since a turbine does a pretty good job of silencing, OEM turbo mufflers can do a lot less restricting to quiet things down. Of course, aftermarket manufacturers took advantage of this performance image and branded a lot of their products with the "turbo" name in order to drum up more business from the high performance crowd. We're sad to say that the term "turbo" has been bastardized in this respect, and would like that to serve as a warning. A "turbo" muffler is not necessarily a high-performance muffler.

Pipe Sizing

We've seen quiet a few "experienced" racers tell people that a bigger exhaust is a better exhaust. Hahaha… NOT.

As discussed earlier, exhaust gas is hot. And we'd like to keep it hot throughout the exhaust system. Why? The answer is simple. Cold air is dense air, and dense air is heavy air. We don't want our engine to be pushing a heavy mass of exhaust gas out of the tailpipe. An extremely large exhaust pipe will cause a slow exhaust flow, which will in turn give the gas plenty of time to cool off en route. Overlarge piping will also allow our exhaust pulses to achieve a higher level of entropy, which will take all of our header tuning and throw it out the window, as pulses will not have the same tendency to line up as they would in a smaller pipe. Coating the entire exhaust system with an insulative material, such as header wrap or a ceramic thermal barrier coating reduces this effect somewhat, but unless you have lots of cash burning a hole in your pocket, is probably not worth the expense on a street driven car.

Unfortunately, we know of no accurate way to calculate optimal exhaust pipe diameter. This is mainly due to the random nature of an exhaust system -- things like bends or kinks in the piping, temperature fluctuations, differences in muffler design, and the lot, make selecting a pipe diameter little more than a guessing game. For engines making 250 to 350 horsepower, the generally accepted pipe diameter is 3 to 3 � inches. Over that amount, you'd be best off going to 4 inches. If you have an engine making over 400 to 500 horsepower, you'd better be happy capping off the fun with a 4 inch exhaust. Ah, the drawbacks of horsepower. The best alternative here would probably be to just run open exhaust!

Other Rules

A lot of the time, you'll hear someone talking about how much hotter the exhaust system on a turbo car gets than a naturally aspirated car. Well, if you are catching my drift so far, you'll know that this is a bunch of BS. The temperature of exhaust gas is controlled by air/fuel mixture, spark, and cam timing. Not the turbo hanging off the exhaust manifold.

When designing an exhaust system, turbocharged engines follow the same rules as naturally aspirated engines. About the only difference is that the turbo engine will require quite a bit less silencing.

Another thing to keep in mind is that, even though it would be really super cool to get a 4 inch, mandrel bent exhaust system installed under your car, keep in mind that all of that beautiful art work won't do you a bit of good if the piping is so big that it gets punctured as you drag it over a speed bump! A good example of this is the 3 inch, cat back system sold by Thermal Research and Development for the Talon/Laser/Eclipse cars. The piping is too big to follow the stock routing exactly, and instead of going up over the rear suspension control arms, it hangs down below the mechanicals, right there in reach of large rocks! So when designing your Ultimate Exhaust System, do be careful!

_________________
'05 GTO 6.0L • 6-spd • 95k miles • 0-60: 4.8s • 16.9 avg MPG • Nelson Ledges Lap: 1:26

'95 Celica GT 2.2L • 5-spd • 165k miles • 0-60: yes

'98 SC Riviera • 281k miles • 298 HP/370 TQ • 0-60: 5.79s • ET: 13.97 @ 99.28 • 4087 lb • 20.1 avg MPG • Nelson Ledges Lap: 1:30
3.4" pulley • AL104 plugs • 180º t-stat • FWI w/K&N • 1.9:1 rockers • OR pushrods • LS6 valve springs • SLP headers • ZZP fuel rails
KYB GR2 struts • MaxAir shocks • Addco sway bars • UMI bushings • GM STB • Enkei 18" EV5s w/ Dunlop DZ101s • F-body calipers
EBC bluestuff/Hawk HP plus • SS lines • Brembo slotted discs • DHP tuned • Aeroforce • Hidden Hitch

^^^ SOLD ^^^ frown

'70 Ninety-Eight Holiday Coupe 455cid • 116k miles
^^^ SOLD ^^^ frown
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Matt08_hcm
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PostSubject: Re: Great exhaust articles   Great exhaust articles EmptySat Mar 07, 2009 6:50 pm

What size pipes are on a 1998 Riviera S/C series 2
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palermocorey90
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PostSubject: Re: Great exhaust articles   Great exhaust articles EmptySun Mar 08, 2009 7:24 am

Matt08_hcm wrote:
What size pipes are on a 1998 Riviera S/C series 2

2.25"

Great post Aaron. but why would my mirrors shake at idle? twisted
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PostSubject: Re: Great exhaust articles   Great exhaust articles EmptyMon Mar 09, 2009 10:30 am

the 2 1/4 pipe splits into 2 x 1 7/8" pipes and mufflers. Lame.
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