Can someone please explain to me all about BACK PRESSURE?
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Moderators: toaddog, TWISTY, V8Patrol, Moderators
Lost Bundy wrote: I was just seeing how many switched on people are out there...![]()
I'm prob going to get hammered now for askin the question.. but hey, got sum people thinkin and about another 10 or so lookin at the thread and not sayin a word.
V8Patrol wrote:We have seen things like baffled intake manifolds, de programed puter chips, etc etc which are all attempts to quieten down new cars. A point in example is M/cycles, many bikes that come out of japan simply wont pass the tough EPA noise levels without the things I listed being fitted, one particular bike was converted to shaft drive because the chain pushed that level past the limit !!
Kingy
Screwy_ScrewBall wrote:V8Patrol wrote:We have seen things like baffled intake manifolds, de programed puter chips, etc etc which are all attempts to quieten down new cars. A point in example is M/cycles, many bikes that come out of japan simply wont pass the tough EPA noise levels without the things I listed being fitted, one particular bike was converted to shaft drive because the chain pushed that level past the limit !!
Kingy
U said that bit twice![]()
Ok, so your saying that some back pressure is needed while some say its now.
In saying that, Do u think that running twin 2/1/2 inch zorst pipes on a more or less stock 308 would be too much?
Am running std manifolds at this stage.....
screwy
NJ SWB wrote: ...increasing valve overlap helps with top-end power (engine breathes better - more air-fuel mixture in, more burnt gases out) at the expense of bottom end torque (don't understand that bit, other than more unburnt fuel out the exhaust upsets the O2 sensor, so the actual mixture in the chamber is no longer optimum. NFI how it affects carby fed engine...)
Screwy_ScrewBall wrote:very very interesting in deed......
Might have to do some research.
Still think im gonna do the twin 2.5 inch zorst on the 308 on std manifolds.
If i put extractors on and the twin 2.5 id say id lose too much back pressure, but with the restriction at the start, ive got what i need.
Doing this in my mind is the same as running extractors on a thin exuast.....
screwy
Screwy_ScrewBall wrote:very very interesting in deed......
Might have to do some research.
Still think im gonna do the twin 2.5 inch zorst on the 308 on std manifolds.
If i put extractors on and the twin 2.5 id say id lose too much back pressure, but with the restriction at the start, ive got what i need.
Doing this in my mind is the same as running extractors on a thin exuast.....
screwy
bru21 wrote:look i will add my view. Before i start
THIS IS THE MOST CONTESTED TOPIC IN THE MODERN WORLD. YOU HAVE STARTED ARGUEMENTS!
i think it is a load of. i said it.
a very poor term.
depends how you look at it
BHP:
does f1 have lots of back pressure, how about gp bikes. no they don't.
Yet every muffler man says you NEED backpressure. i have been told not to put 21/2 side pipes and free flowing boxes on my last 350. i would lose backpressure and bhp. what a crock.![]()
how could free flowing boxes reduce hp. when you open your throttle your hp increases because along with other things, your engines overall flow restriction decreases as your throttle butterfly is no longer reducing gas flow. this is the same at the other end with freer boxes, although due to the pressures involved less important.
however there is a syphon effect generated by the correctly sized-for-application exhaust tubing. as the gas is expanding it rushes to the end of the tube to freedom. the correctly designed tube will aid this, too big reduce it as the gas is content and not rushed to free itself of energy - pressure. this is why the expansion chamber works on a twostroke motocrosser for example - suck 'supercharging" the intake and besides more fully charging the cylinder it removes spent gasses more effectively.
this is the effect that many people refer to as backpressure. yet it is not a restriction like a small pipe or box like many think rather a gas syphon effect.
this is my story i am sticking to it
cheers
bru
Unfortunately the extractors available to us plebs off the shelves are not tuned as you describe- their main aim is to be bigger diameter, shinier and make more noise than stock, which they achieve well.ORSM45 wrote:Screwy_ScrewBall wrote:very very interesting in deed......
Might have to do some research.
Still think im gonna do the twin 2.5 inch zorst on the 308 on std manifolds.
If i put extractors on and the twin 2.5 id say id lose too much back pressure, but with the restriction at the start, ive got what i need.
Doing this in my mind is the same as running extractors on a thin exuast.....
screwythat is funny as.
i dont think it works like that. the engine pushes out 'pulses' of exhaust.
the extractors are made so that the momentum of the pulse draws the next cylinders pulse out with it.
if you run the std manifolds. you wouldnt get that pulse extraction as the runners are different lengths. and they all just crash into each other.
my mate had twin 2.25s on his 350. you could hear him coming a mile away. he used to set car alarms off.
i dont think backpressure is a good term for it. but an exhaust needs momentum, thats why 6 inch pipes on a N/A mini wouldnt be a good thing.
bru21 wrote:look i will add my view. Before i start
THIS IS THE MOST CONTESTED TOPIC IN THE MODERN WORLD. YOU HAVE STARTED ARGUEMENTS!
i think it is a load of. i said it.
a very poor term.
depends how you look at it
BHP:
does f1 have lots of back pressure, how about gp bikes. no they don't.
Yet every muffler man says you NEED backpressure. i have been told not to put 21/2 side pipes and free flowing boxes on my last 350. i would lose backpressure and bhp. what a crock.![]()
how could free flowing boxes reduce hp. when you open your throttle your hp increases because along with other things, your engines overall flow restriction decreases as your throttle butterfly is no longer reducing gas flow. this is the same at the other end with freer boxes, although due to the pressures involved less important.
however there is a syphon effect generated by the correctly sized-for-application exhaust tubing. as the gas is expanding it rushes to the end of the tube to freedom. the correctly designed tube will aid this, too big reduce it as the gas is content and not rushed to free itself of energy - pressure. this is why the expansion chamber works on a twostroke motocrosser for example - suck 'supercharging" the intake and besides more fully charging the cylinder it removes spent gasses more effectively.
this is the effect that many people refer to as backpressure. yet it is not a restriction like a small pipe or box like many think rather a gas syphon effect.
this is my story i am sticking to it
cheers
bru
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