Ciro Pabón wrote:Welcome, Tuono Tom. I have no experience that is worth mentioning on motorcycles, but I know that in cars, unequal length headers offer
less horsepower than equal length. What I know is they are easier to install, they produce less heat and, normally, they are easier, with a good design, for reaching spark plugs and other elements. Here you have real numbers on a Mustang, Hp at RPM:
Code: Select all
Exhaust type 3000 3500 4000 4500 5000 Avg
Equal length 197 226 232 237 233 226
Unequal len. 192 214 224 231 223 217
Sweet... and thanks for the welcome.
And that made me giggle- the plugs are on the top, under the fuel tank, the exhaust is on the bottom, single muffler attaches to a mid-pipe after the collector.
Still tough to get to the plugs... another story in packaging there, so never mind.
Ciro Pabón wrote:
As for balance pipes, they offer two alleged advantages:
- In a dual pipe system (for cars, with pipes from each side of the block) they offer twice the exhaust, as cylinders won't fire at the same time.
- They (duhhh...) balance the pressure among the two pipes.
Ciro Pabón wrote:
I don't see any of these two advantages at work in the picture you post, but I wait to be enlightened.
The picture you link us to is certainly... amazing. I repeat I'm ignorant about it.
Perhaps... the balancer pipe makes up for the fact that they ARE un-equal length 'headers'??
This is my quest... to figure out why it (reportedly, no dyno-charts yet) WORKS. And how to possibly improve the concept.
Ciro Pabón wrote:Anyway, I wonder why the exhaust you show doesn't seem to have an expansion chamber.
The Aprilia v-twin, running a Rotax 1000cc 60 degree v-twin has a very open, and rather short exhaust. (Muffler? barely, but not a Harley straight pipe). Due to the fact that a body has to wrap around the thing, has limited ground clearance, etc., an expansion chamber would toast legs... there
may be room as the collector is under the engine, midships, but that is a whole NEW can 'o worms, as they say.
(For reference, these normally get 125+hp and about 75+ lb/ft to the ground, 430 lbs gassed up, 10,500 redline. You do the math, but they're FUN).
Ciro Pabón wrote:I'm assuming you know a lot about it, so please don't laugh at this program, for single pipes:
http://www.iwt.com.au/data.htm
Perhaps DaveKillens can help you a lot more.
Wow, Manchild. What could it be for?
I'll check that out, thanks!
EDIT- oops- that's for two stroke's... and it's just WRONG to have a air/fuel mixture in the CRANKCASE!! ha.
-T_T