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S Chassis Technical discussion related to the S Chassis such as the S12, S13, S14, and S15. |
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08-29-2010, 03:01 PM | #31 |
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The construction of the mufflers make a major difference over any size difference.
Big oval cans are going to be a lot quieter and better tone then an N1 or glass pack. Cat's help a lot. If you can't run one at least have a resonated test pipe. Then a resonator and muffler.
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10-23-2010, 07:50 PM | #32 |
Apexi Noir
there is a video clip of it in a 240 on youtube. Sounds great. As for the 2.5 to 3 in debate. Wow. So horsepower is made by how much cfm will flow through and engine. Basically. So if you decrease back pressure you increase how much cfm the head can flow. The reason for back pressure is to artificially increase compression since not all the exhaust will escape. By going to 3 in on an na setup you typically see a small loss in low to mid range torque and a small gain in top end power due to increased flow potential. I love how the people who had so much trash to talk about 3in on an na ka are no where to be found no that proof was posted. Lol or should i say roflkoptor. |
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10-23-2010, 10:54 PM | #34 |
Leaky Injector
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10-24-2010, 12:31 AM | #35 |
No. If all the exhaust cant get out of the combustion chamber there is more "air" or exhaust in the chamber before the next intake stroke. Keep in mind, when an intake stroke happens it does not completely fill the combustion chamber to maximum capacity. The more that is in the combustion chamber the more compression you get. Like i said it increases your compression. It does not increase your mechanical compression. That isnt possible. But it does increase the combustion pressures and hence compression. You might want to make sure that you completely understand how an internal combustion engine works before you call me out on this kind of thing.
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10-24-2010, 09:52 AM | #37 |
Leaky Injector
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I understand how an internal combustion engine works and dynamics behind them. I think you are wrong. Latent exhaust gas that hasn't been discharged from the engine will result in a lower VE (volumetric efficiency, or the amount of combustible air/fuel available in the cylinder relative to the displacement of the cylinder). Leftover exhaust gas that has not escaped will do nothing to increase your power anywhere in the RPM range at any time. All leftover exhaust gas will do is dissallow or displace more fresh air and fuel from getting in. Obviously it will not increase your mechanical, or static, compression. It will also not increase your dynamic compression. What your talking about is more like EGR. Exhaust gas in the cylinder is inert and not combustible and lowers exhaust gas temps, which lowers NOX emmissions. This is why there is an EGR system on our cars.
The issue at hand was backpressure. Backpressure is not necessarily something that is desired. Backpressure is never a good thing. However backpressure is a result of having smaller diameter exhaust tubing which is necessary to create strong exhaust pulses and exhaust velocities at midrange RPMs. The downside is that the smaller diameter tubing becomes a bottleneck at higher RPMs. It's the strong exhaust pulses and velocities which create effective scavenging at lower to mid RPMs, not the backpressure. Backpressure is just a result of having smaller sized tubing and is a necessary evil that can't be avoided. |
10-24-2010, 10:38 AM | #38 | |
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10-24-2010, 02:18 PM | #39 |
Firstly, having exhaust in the combustion chamber does not mean it will displace oxygen and fuel. Like i said a compression ratio is only a best case scenario. VERY BEST CASE. It is truthfully dependent on a lot of things. So keep in mind that when your engine is running its not running to its full potential almost ever. So having some exhaust in the chamber because of high back pressure means one thing basically. A leaner mixture in certain rpm ranges. You do know what a leaner mixture will do right? It will increase torque. This might be a different story if this car had a wideband stock that the ecu could add fuel with if it saw a leaner than normal mixture. But it cant. It only reads grams per second of oxygen which will not change if you dont expel all your exhaust and run lean. Keep in mind i'm not talking massively lean here. Only a little. And like i said. Its a small amount of torque and a small amount of horsepower i'm talking about here. Seriously less than 5 on average. An engine does not fill the combustion chamber to its maximum potential while the engine is running and thats a fact. Truthfully exhaust velocity is probably the biggest factor here. There are some fancy systems that have variable exhaust runner systems. One for high velocity at low rpm's and then one that opens up at higher rpm's to keep the velocity up with the increase of flow. Ceramic coating also helps. This is an interesting conversation i think. Good exhaust velocity will cause a good scavenging effect for sure. I really wonder how much time header producers spend on making a well engineered header. If you look at companies that make header parts like collectors there is some really fancy exhaust parts that you almost never see on name brand headers. Makes me kind of want to experiment on making my own.
Last edited by hsitko; 10-24-2010 at 05:00 PM.. |
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10-24-2010, 03:49 PM | #40 |
Post Whore!
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try 2 2.5" pipes running back from the headers, nothing else. i cant hear shit anymore
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10-24-2010, 05:28 PM | #42 | ||||||||
Leaky Injector
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@6.5psi, I'm finding a lambda of about .85 from peak torque to peak HP feels good. In this case I'm on E85 These are my experiences with my KA, both N/A and turboed. When you say lean mixture, I'm not sure what you mean since you didn't add any points of reference to your story. Quote:
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OP, sorry for threadjacking. This will be my last post of this nature. |
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10-26-2010, 10:18 AM | #43 |
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Back Pressure Good For NA But Bad For Forced Induction
If you're still looking, just throw a HKS High Power Exhaust on it and keep it moving! Sounds Deep and Throaty without the raspy crap and fits like a glove for a NA or Forced KA! I'm running a ISIS GT Single for the S14 that I bought from Billy on this forum's marketplace. It's a nice setup as well but my friend has the High Power and it sounds "Intimidating!"
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10-26-2010, 10:57 AM | #44 |
Leaky Injector
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+1 for the HKS. I have an HKS Dragger 2 and I believe the pipe size is 65mm ~ 2.5" and the exhaust note was great N/A and it's damn near stock quiet with the turbo. Yet the system is totally free flowing as I noticed by looking straight through the muffler. All the bends seem to be as shallow as possible and the quality is great. I've had this exhaust for going on 6 or 7 years and it's still resisting rust and has all of it's coating still on. Also its fitment in bolting on with dead on. I couldn't have been happier with this exhaust system.
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10-27-2010, 09:41 PM | #45 |
Leaky Injector
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My exhaust is 3" stainless from the turbo back to a 3" stainless catback (no cat) the apexi axle back was removed in favor of a 3" stainless straight pipe with a tig welded pie cut turn down. Only "sound dampening" comes from the middle resonator in the apexi exhaust, thats it no cat and no muff. NY cops don't ever pull me over, its loud, and rumbles and shoots flames, but they stopped harassing me as soon as the apexi cannon was circumcised, man the cops are dumb.
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