CatBack/ Exhaust size. - FirebirdV6.com/CamaroV6.com Message Board

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

CatBack/ Exhaust size.

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • #61
    ...uhm, what did you say that nobody else didn't? ^^^
    Mustangs.. Come to the darkside...<br /><br />The dark side is the path to the shadow of greed. =D

    Comment


    • #62
      Quite a bit.

      Read again, especially the part about the catalytics.
      Welcome to the Internet where everyone\'s a mechanic and has a 10 second car.<br /> <a href=\"http://www.gmthunder.com\" target=\"_blank\">http://www.gmthunder.com</a> <br /> <a href=\"http://www.rudyhelds.com/Customer_Rides/80_Camaro_Z28.htm\" target=\"_blank\">http://www.rudyhelds.com/Customer_Rides/80_Camaro_Z28.htm</a> <br />When the green flag drops, all the bull**** stops.

      Comment


      • #63
        just put a turbo on you'll have all the back PSI you need and run like 8' exuast out the back or in my case lack there of
        www.turbov6camaro.com
        1997 3800 Series II Camaro
        4600 Stall for my ride to the mall :chug:
        7.18 @ 99.77 1/8 -1.8x sixty (current quickest v6 fbod)
        11.23 @ unk 5 1/4 - 7.19 1/8 - 1.83 sixty

        Comment


        • #64
          Originally posted by Adrenaline_Z:
          Hello All,

          Harlan asked me to view this post and share my
          thoughts.

          Initially I was given bits and pieces of this
          thread via e-mail, but now reading the entire
          story I'm able to give better judgement on the
          topic.

          First off, this thread is so far gone, it's probably
          not my place to interfere and there are so many
          opinions over fact, I'm not so sure I want to
          get too deep into this.

          For what it's worth, everyone has a valid point
          to a certain extent.

          One thing everyone fails to realize is the 3"
          pipe IS too big for the 3.8L displacement.

          What is happening is, the frontal surface area of
          the catalytic converter creates a backpressure
          (resistance of flow) which causes a reduction
          in power.

          This is due to a high pressure value residing the
          the exhaust system.

          By increasing the surface area of the catalytic
          internals, the exhaust gas has more area to flow
          through which allows the pressure in the exhaust
          system to drop.

          This is why you are seeing a modest increase in
          horsepower.

          If the pressure in the exhaust is lower than the
          pressure in the manifold and cylinder, the air and
          fuel charge will move downstream at higher velocities
          according to the pressure differential.

          If you were to install a tuned performance exhaust
          system which consisted of a high flow catalytic
          (let's say 800 CFM) with a 2 inch diameter pipe,
          the pressure before and after the catalytic would
          be less because the smaller diameter pipe will
          increase the gas flow velocity.

          With a catback system that is properly sized and
          tuned, you would allow the power band to stay
          relatively stable while augmenting the power across
          the entire range.

          In addition, you'd see more than 8 HP with tuning.

          If you don't understand pressure differential with
          fluid/gas in a pipe, have a read on Bernoulli's Principle.

          http://www.mste.uiuc.edu/davea/aviat...Principle.html

          You would find without a doubt that installing
          a higher flow catalytic (800 CFM+), or removing it totally
          while installing the correct length and diameter
          intermediate pipes will see a gain over a 3" inch
          pipe and 3" cat.

          This all has to do with, pipe volume (velocity)
          resonance and pulse tuning using valve timing.

          EDIT: The muffler flow also has the very same impact
          on the exhaust system internal pressure.

          More flow = more power.

          Short pipe, large diameter = top end resonance, High RPM
          Long pipe, small diameter = low end resonance, Low RPM
          so basicaly what your saying is even tho the pipe is smaller it still flows more lb/min because of the higher velocity?

          way i see it, just because its flowing faster does not mean its flowing more. kind like a water hose and a fire hose, you might be able to get the water hose to spray farther then the fire hose but theres know way in hell its sprayin the same amount of water. gal/min terms

          please explain howsstuffworks don't go into it.
          also on a car with a turbo would this even matter ?
          www.turbov6camaro.com
          1997 3800 Series II Camaro
          4600 Stall for my ride to the mall :chug:
          7.18 @ 99.77 1/8 -1.8x sixty (current quickest v6 fbod)
          11.23 @ unk 5 1/4 - 7.19 1/8 - 1.83 sixty

          Comment


          • #65
            The first thing you need to understand is how
            fluids and gas react in a tube. Read that link
            about Bernoulli's Principle in an earlier post.

            Once you have a grasp on that link, you can relate
            that information to this example:

            Let's assume that atmospheric pressure never changes.
            Let's also assume that the engine puts out the
            same amount of exhaust gas at any RPM and the
            pressure is constant.

            If we were to measure the pressure at a few points
            along the exhaust system, we would see different
            values.

            Atmospheric pressure is ~14.7 PSI at sea level

            When the engine is off, the pressure in the intake
            manifold, cylinders and exhaust equals atmospheric
            pressure.

            Once the pistons are moving, the pressure throughout
            the engine is different.

            The exhaust for this example has a 3" catalytic
            conveter that flows 400 CFM @ 28" depression, and
            a 3" intermediate pipe, and a 3" muffler that flows 600 CFM.

            For one instance in time, assume the pressure at the

            Y-pipe is - 5 PSI.

            Though the catalytic is - 2 PSI

            In the intermediate pipe is - 5 PSI

            In the muffler - 2 PSI

            Manifold Absolute Pressure is + 16 PSI

            The rate of flow is relative to a higher pressure
            in the manifold moving itself down to a lower
            pressure area (which is the exhaust).

            For the next scenario:

            The exhaust for this example has a 2.5" catalytic
            conveter that flows 800 CFM @ 28" depression, and
            a 2" intermediate pipe, and a 2" muffler that flows 800 CFM.


            Y-pipe is - 7 PSI.

            Though the catalytic is - 5 PSI

            In the intermediate pipe is - 7 PSI

            In the muffler - 6 PSI

            Manifold Absolute Pressure is + 18 PSI

            You see that the reduction in pressure (lower than
            atmospheric) allows more charge to enter the
            manifold and cylinders.

            How did we achieve this?

            We used a smaller pipe with less restrictive catalytics and mufflers.

            Since the fluid/gas can create higher velocities
            in a smaller diameter tube (of proper size), the
            pressure will drop in the exhaust.

            What everyone else is doing, is somewhat incorrect
            technically.
            Everyone thinks that getting a larger pipe and
            cataltyic is better.

            The truth is, you could have a smaller diameter
            catalytic that flows more and proper tubing which
            increases gas flow speeds (velocity) to make better
            power.

            With the hose example, it's the same thing.
            It IS flowing just the same amount, as long as the
            pressure is allowed to increase at the water pump.

            IE: ~100 PSI into a 2" hose will flow the same as
            ~80 PSI into a 2.2" hose.

            One thing we can't do is equate a fluid and a gas.
            If we pressurize gas it compresses. Fluids can't compress, therefore we can't use the water hose
            and exhaust system as an example.

            With a turbo, it's another comparison we can't relate.
            Boosted motors always have their manifold pressurized
            higher than a naturally aspirated motor.
            Therefore, using a larger pipe will be fine because
            the Manifold pressure is not AS dependent on the
            exhaust pressure.

            All of the above is one piece of the pie when it
            comes to exhaust tuning.

            There is pressure reflections which can be timed
            with valve events to create even more power.

            There is lenght of pipes tuned to RPM which dials
            in a certain window of power.

            There is also shape of the pipe, thermal characteristics
            of the pipe, etc. which attribute to laminar flow
            and making even more power.

            [ October 02, 2004, 06:03 PM: Message edited by: Adrenaline_Z ]
            Welcome to the Internet where everyone\'s a mechanic and has a 10 second car.<br /> <a href=\"http://www.gmthunder.com\" target=\"_blank\">http://www.gmthunder.com</a> <br /> <a href=\"http://www.rudyhelds.com/Customer_Rides/80_Camaro_Z28.htm\" target=\"_blank\">http://www.rudyhelds.com/Customer_Rides/80_Camaro_Z28.htm</a> <br />When the green flag drops, all the bull**** stops.

            Comment


            • #66
              read like 8 times......
              ok i think what you was trying to say was
              the freeer flowing exaust put more PSI in the intake and there for a "more full" intake charge make more power....

              but how are you getting more the 14.7 whit out boost?
              www.turbov6camaro.com
              1997 3800 Series II Camaro
              4600 Stall for my ride to the mall :chug:
              7.18 @ 99.77 1/8 -1.8x sixty (current quickest v6 fbod)
              11.23 @ unk 5 1/4 - 7.19 1/8 - 1.83 sixty

              Comment


              • #67
                Good question.

                It's called a 'standing wave' effect.

                If you know how tunnel rams work, you can apply
                the same idea to intake tuning.

                Think of the atmoshpere (Air) as water.

                Remember I said not to equate water and air
                before? Well, forget it for now ;)

                Let's pretend we are dumping water down the intake
                runner of cylinder #1 with the intake valve open.

                The water is rushing down the intake runner and
                flowing past the valve.

                When we close the intake valve, the water that
                still has motion (kinetic energy) hits the back
                of the valve and literally reflects backward.

                We have now created a wave going the opposite
                direction in the intake runner.

                On the next intake stroke the valve opens and
                we begin to pour more water down into the intake
                runner.

                Remember that wave that reflected backward? It has
                already hit another reflective surface and is
                travelling back toward the intake valve.

                Now we have a wave and a fresh charge of water
                rushing toward the intake valve.

                This creates an additive effect.

                There is the inital wave reflected back which has
                energy along with the new charge of water we
                are pouring in.

                So if we've added 2 PSI of the reflected wave, and
                14.7 PSI of new water, the result is adding 14.7+2=16.7 PSI

                Or

                2 PSI over atmospheric pressure.

                You have to imagine the intake and exhaust as one
                string. When both valves are overlapping, this
                scavenging effect can create standing waves
                to fill the cylinder with more charge.

                This is why it's very important to tune the engine
                as a system...not just change one piece and hope
                it works.

                There is so much going on beyond our imagination.

                Did you know acoustic energy also helps make power?
                The sound waves in the intake and exhaust are also
                another part of tuning that not many people are aware of.
                Welcome to the Internet where everyone\'s a mechanic and has a 10 second car.<br /> <a href=\"http://www.gmthunder.com\" target=\"_blank\">http://www.gmthunder.com</a> <br /> <a href=\"http://www.rudyhelds.com/Customer_Rides/80_Camaro_Z28.htm\" target=\"_blank\">http://www.rudyhelds.com/Customer_Rides/80_Camaro_Z28.htm</a> <br />When the green flag drops, all the bull**** stops.

                Comment


                • #68
                  Wow, it's nice to see that someone with real knowledge chime in. I've got a 3.8l with a CAI and a 3" catback system. The torque curve did move up a bit, it doesn't have quit the low end it used to. If you aren't going to mod the car too much then it's probably not a great tradeoff (in my opinion). Adrenaline_Z, I've got a turbo kit on the way (from FFF) and plan on running a full 3" exhaust (headers, high flow cat, 3" pipes). Is this a good idea? I'd like to hear some real logic as to why it's a good idea (and do you have any good sources we can read, I like that type of information).
                  Jeff R.<br />97 RED RS<br /><a href=\"http://camaro.rscpro.com\" target=\"_blank\">http://camaro.rscpro.com</a>

                  Comment


                  • #69
                    Originally posted by Adrenaline_Z:
                    Good question.

                    It's called a 'standing wave' effect.

                    If you know how tunnel rams work, you can apply
                    the same idea to intake tuning.

                    Think of the atmoshpere (Air) as water.

                    Remember I said not to equate water and air
                    before? Well, forget it for now ;)

                    Let's pretend we are dumping water down the intake
                    runner of cylinder #1 with the intake valve open.

                    The water is rushing down the intake runner and
                    flowing past the valve.

                    When we close the intake valve, the water that
                    still has motion (kinetic energy) hits the back
                    of the valve and literally reflects backward.

                    We have now created a wave going the opposite
                    direction in the intake runner.

                    On the next intake stroke the valve opens and
                    we begin to pour more water down into the intake
                    runner.

                    Remember that wave that reflected backward? It has
                    already hit another reflective surface and is
                    travelling back toward the intake valve.

                    Now we have a wave and a fresh charge of water
                    rushing toward the intake valve.

                    This creates an additive effect.

                    There is the inital wave reflected back which has
                    energy along with the new charge of water we
                    are pouring in.

                    So if we've added 2 PSI of the reflected wave, and
                    14.7 PSI of new water, the result is adding 14.7+2=16.7 PSI

                    Or

                    2 PSI over atmospheric pressure.

                    You have to imagine the intake and exhaust as one
                    string. When both valves are overlapping, this
                    scavenging effect can create standing waves
                    to fill the cylinder with more charge.

                    This is why it's very important to tune the engine
                    as a system...not just change one piece and hope
                    it works.

                    There is so much going on beyond our imagination.

                    Did you know acoustic energy also helps make power?
                    The sound waves in the intake and exhaust are also
                    another part of tuning that not many people are aware of.
                    ummmm my brain is full going to have to look some of this up///
                    www.turbov6camaro.com
                    1997 3800 Series II Camaro
                    4600 Stall for my ride to the mall :chug:
                    7.18 @ 99.77 1/8 -1.8x sixty (current quickest v6 fbod)
                    11.23 @ unk 5 1/4 - 7.19 1/8 - 1.83 sixty

                    Comment


                    • #70
                      This topic has been discussed before. Do a search next time that's what it's there for! *****es.

                      Comment


                      • #71
                        but it's obvious by the lack of understanding that a search will not reveal any good information.


                        Tino. Thank you for your interest. I am glad to see you here. I find is 100% funny that KBeezy would even ATEMPT to argue with you. and again, he trys to shift the direction of a point to confuse and detor the statemnts made instade of dissagree and show proof of his ideas.


                        I hope everyone can see now that there is a lot to learn. and there is no better person that I know of to explain then tino.
                        1996 Silver camaro Z28. M6,<br />12 bolt, 4.11\'s, posi, Rear cover, Spec stage 2, loudmouth, more <a href=\"http://home.mainstreamtopics.com/?index=3&module=1\" target=\"_blank\">http://home.mainstreamtopics.com/?index=3&module=1</a> &lt;Mods, Pics & more <a href=\"http://home.mainstreamtopics.com/?index=3&module=2\" target=\"_blank\">http://home.mainstreamtopics.com/?index=3&module=2</a> &lt;Fbody Tech Articals

                        Comment


                        • #72
                          Man this is some way cool interesting and knowlegable information. Thanks guys! [img]smile.gif[/img]
                          ---Niño---<br /><i>95\' silver 5 spd</i>

                          Comment


                          • #73
                            Originally posted by HBHRacing:
                            but it's obvious by the lack of understanding that a search will not reveal any good information.


                            Tino. Thank you for your interest. I am glad to see you here. I find is 100% funny that KBeezy would even ATEMPT to argue with you. and again, he trys to shift the direction of a point to confuse and detor the statemnts made instade of dissagree and show proof of his ideas.


                            I hope everyone can see now that there is a lot to learn. and there is no better person that I know of to explain then tino.
                            No, I've just been working for 9 days straight now and this is my 10th day. Just wait until I have a day off [img]smile.gif[/img]
                            Mustangs.. Come to the darkside...<br /><br />The dark side is the path to the shadow of greed. =D

                            Comment


                            • #74
                              All I want to see is PROOF that you guys can back up. You can bring up scientific laws, principles, theories.. But you guys have NOT given me what I am looking for with proof. I want to see actual TESTING that SAYS a 3.8 LOSES exhaust flow and exhaust velocity with a 3" system over a 2 1/2" system. PROVE it. You guys can say all you want but you still have only stated theories laws and principles. Not actual data, which in this case still doesn't prove ****. All we still have to go by is data which actually PROVES something -- which is a 3" exhaust is currently the BEST KNOWN setup a V6 F-Body driver has in a PERFORMANCE oriented exhaust. N/A, Doped, or Blown....


                              Because without ACTUAL testing all you guys have is a theory -- atleast we have dyno tests and timeslips to backup our results.

                              [ October 03, 2004, 01:25 PM: Message edited by: KBeezy ]
                              Mustangs.. Come to the darkside...<br /><br />The dark side is the path to the shadow of greed. =D

                              Comment


                              • #75
                                sigh.. Now that you are here tino I am going to let you handle him. I already of 3 pages worth and he is still being ignorant.
                                1996 Silver camaro Z28. M6,<br />12 bolt, 4.11\'s, posi, Rear cover, Spec stage 2, loudmouth, more <a href=\"http://home.mainstreamtopics.com/?index=3&module=1\" target=\"_blank\">http://home.mainstreamtopics.com/?index=3&module=1</a> &lt;Mods, Pics & more <a href=\"http://home.mainstreamtopics.com/?index=3&module=2\" target=\"_blank\">http://home.mainstreamtopics.com/?index=3&module=2</a> &lt;Fbody Tech Articals

                                Comment

                                Latest Topics

                                Collapse

                                There are no results that meet this criteria.

                                FORUM SPONSORS

                                Collapse
                                Working...
                                X