blakerwry
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Check out this automobile tweak guide... There are sone excelent exhaust tips
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Jake the Dog said:a well designed interference type extractor system with a good flowing system and mufflers, even on a stock engine, will produce more torque and hence power, throughout the entire rev range. having said that, it’s not uncommon to see a young guy with a small 2litre 4cyl engine go and get a 3” exhaust system fitted cat back, with a large 5” tipped muffler. such an overly large system does indeed reduce gas flow speed, causing a performance drop.
the key is using an entire system that is suitable sized and tuned for the engine’s characteristics.
Buck said:Jake the Dog said:Such an overly large system does indeed reduce gas flow speed, causing a performance drop.
As you pointed out, standard systems are normally quite restrictive, this also helps the engine idle more smoothly and requires less material for crankshaft counterweights and flywheel mass.
NRG = mc² said:They have cats nowdays too... and the new common rail systems are complicated and expensive to fix when things go wrong - but at least they drive much better than the old mecahnical systems...
NRG = mc² said:Not to mention the turbo whistle and the chirping of the wastegate reminded you of being in something from fast and furious, though you needed the window down to hear the wastegate. I did get some funny looks from people with the window open in early November, I must say.
I assume this is because the piston does not form-fit to the head on the exhaust stroke (or any other stroke)?Buck said:If there was no valve overlap, it would be 100% impossible to completely irradicate all of the spent gases from the cylinder.
Buck said:At low RPM, this effect actually increases torque, because the least amount of compression is lost during the intake stroke, and the ratio of intake to exhaust gases is high. Unfortunately, as the RPMs increase, there is increasingly less time to evacuate the exhaust gases during the exhaust stroke, and more and more depleted air-fuel remains in the cylinders when the exhaust valve closes. The motor becomes incredibly inefficient near its readline. A motor designed for high-torque applications, such as towing, tends to exhibit less valve overlap then normal. The type of cam used in this application is often called an "RV" cam, because a recreational vehicle doesn't need horsepower as much as it needs low-end torque to get it moving.
Your car would also run terribly if there was too much valve overlap as well. When exhaust gases rush out of the cylinder, they create a low pressure area in the cylinder and the exhaust system, sucking the intake charge right into the cylinder, and right back out into the exhaust system. This is called scavenging. When that air spills out, so does the fuel it was carrying, so the O2 sensor reports a rich condition to the computer, often causing further decreases in the amount of fuel the computer injects. At low RPMs, this effect is most pronounced as there is sufficient time to suck out a significant portion of the intake charge, reducing torque. As the RPMs increase, however, the extra velocity imparted to the intake charge increases the amount that squeezes into the cylinder after the exhaust valve closes, as the valve closes so quickly at high RPMs that barely any intake charge escapes through the exhaust system.
No doubt you see the dilemna posed to designers when they choose a cam for the motor - the right combination of power must be achieved at the intended RPM range of the vehicle - if this is a tiny four cylinder, which must spin high RPM to make any power at all, you have to design in a higher amount of overlap. If the vehicle is mostly intended for low speed towing, you design in a smaller amount of overlap for more low-end grunt. Overlap is one of the reasons why the four-cylinder Acura Integra GS-R makes 170hp at almost 7000 RPM, and your 3.0L makes 171lb-ft of torque at 2000 RPM.
Velocity or volume. I bet you are thinking turbo but what about larger intake headers.Buck said:You can compensate for this by increasing the velocity of the intake charge. Increasing the intake velocity has the added side effect of increasing back pressure, because there is more air to be evacuated during the exhaust stroke. Note that if you increase intake velocity past the limits of the exhaust system, the gains you achieve are diminished to the point of being non-existent. That power will be there when you do upgrade the exhaust system, which is why something as simple as upgrading the exhaust system can result in huge horsepower gains.
I'm still not exactly sure what it is physically that you are calling back pressure. Is this the pressure just outside the combustion chamber on the exhaust side that is a result of the gas mass-flow through the exhaust manifold?
I assume this is because the piston does not form-fit to the head on the exhaust stroke (or any other stroke)?
PS. I have seen designs for an exhaust system in which at a certain RPM an electronically actuated valve opens a second exhaust pipe from just behind the exhaust headers. I'm also surprised that electronically actuated valves have not been seen in production until recently.
Correctclippy said:Is this the pressure just outside the combustion chamber on the exhaust side that is a result of the gas mass-flow through the exhaust manifold?
Correct, thus you expend the excess gas by starting the process of filling the chamber with the combustion mixture.clip-doggie-snoop said:I assume this is because the piston does not form-fit to the head on the exhaust stroke (or any other stroke)?
They are partial airflow restrictions, but their design is unique. Remember, the design of an exhaust system is to expel and filter gas, plus to muffle noise, not to create an elaborate method of backpressure in order to boost performance. That is why the benefits of increasing exhaust flow at high-rpms (increasing high-end performance) is lost at low-rpms (loss of torque). Instead of using the exhaust system as a means of boosting performance, variable timing is much better. And as the name implies, it adjusts for the appropriate circumstance. Nonetheless, some car manufactures use the exhaust system to create their desired back-pressure at the expense of some performance.home-G-clip said:One part I'm having trouble with is the part the cat and the muffler play in chamber pressure because they are at least partial obstructions to the gas flow.
That is why they developed variable intake manifolds. They adjust in size and shape to compensate for lower and higher pressures.clip-o-rama said:Velocity or volume. I bet you are thinking turbo but what about larger intake headers.
You get the idea. But you can also see how just removing a muffler, or slapping on a louder sounding one isn’t the best way to increase performance. It is actually a rather uncalculated attempt at increasing performance.clipmeister said:So, If I understand correctly you want a small enough exhaust system to encourage a good mass-flow rate out of the chamber but not so small as to be restrictive when the mass-flow rate goes up due to increased engine RPMs.
NRG = mc² said:Its still uploading... will take another 20 minutes or so.
NRG = mc² said:Try now.
NRG = mc² said:Is it the correct size? 66,709,504 bytes.
Otherwise you probably don't have DivX?
NRG = mc² said:So.. did the video work?