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Re: Exhaust Theory

To: Douglas Frank <frank@zk3.dec.com>
Subject: Re: Exhaust Theory
From: Pat Mullen <pmullen@telus.net>
Date: Sat, 21 Apr 2001 13:18:28 -0700
Cc: "'triumphs@autox.team.net'" <triumphs@autox.team.net>
References: <C1E1D31BEB25D4118CD4009027FC6991016DF24F@EXCHBOS1> <3AE077CD.12AE779B@zk3.dec.com>
Listers,

A good book on the subject fleshes out Douglas's points. It is the third
edition of "Scientific Design of Exhaust & Intake Systems" by the late
Philip H. Smith and John C. Morrison (both professional automobile
engineers), pub. in 1971 by G.T.Foulis & Co.

....Pat Mullen, TR3A

Douglas Frank wrote:
> 
> "Freeman, Noah" wrote:
> >
> > Hello all-
> >
> > As someone who is going to have to at least partially replace his exhaust,
> > im interested in learning about this stuff, but find it confusing...
> >
> > I initially thought:  Less obstruction (free flow muffler and wide pipes)
> > leads to less resistance for the enginge to fight, so always more
> > efficient/fast/powerful motor, with a lot more noise.
> 
> > But now im hearing that large pipes, etc can actually hurt low end power?
> > Is this true?  Why?
> 
> I think that applies to turbo cars.  A too-large diameter means
> there's a large volume for gas to fill, so flow slows down, and
> turbos don't spool well.  That said, big pipes downstream of the
> turbo should help.
> 
> Aside from backpressure, changing pipe lengths can have
> significant effect on power.  Pressure waves emanating from the
> cylinder head propagate down-pipe to some terminus, then reflect
> back.  When the reflection arrives back at the cylinder, it could
> either help or hinder exhaust evacuation or charge intake,
> depending on which valves are open at the time.  The terminus
> that reflects the wave could be a sharp bend, a change in pipe
> diameter, a silencer/resonator, or the tailpipe outlet.
> 
> It could also be where pipes join, such as the collector on your
> header.  This is why a 4-2-1 header behaves differently than 4-1,
> for instance.  The joins are at different distances from the
> cylinders, so the reflected pressure waves arrive at different
> times.
> 
> A reflection's time of arrival, expressed as a crankshaft
> position, will obviously depend on engine speed as well as pipe
> length and the speed of sound in exhaust gas (whatever that is).
> This is why a 4-1 header will operate best at one engine speed
> (all its downpipes are the same length), while an engine wearing
> a 4-2-1 design (with two different lengths) has a wider but lower
> power band.  You see 4-1 headers on race cars a lot because a
> race car typically operates at only one engine speed: redline.
> Street cars usually wear 4-2-1 headers.
> 
> An exhaust pipe is an organ pipe: same physics apply.
> 
> --
> Douglas Frank Compaq Computer Corp.
> ZKO           110 Spit Brook Rd.       The older I get,
> 603-884-0501  Nashua, NH USA 03062       the better I was.

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