I know F1 cars don't a have a silencer, but how do the teams determine the area for the section following the collector?
I have a flat-four with a 1-4-3-2 sequential firing order that i'm building a new exhaust for. I've the headers made, and I'm wondering if the cross-sectional area of the "silencer" section/that bit after the collector should equal:
1) The area of a single header pipe, because only one cylinder is delivering gas at any one time.
2) The sum of the areas of the four headers, because:
At maximum RPM (~5800), there may not be enough time for any one cylinder to fully exhaust its contents before the discharge from all of the other cylinders reaches the silencer. Therefore a situation exists where at high RPM, the volume (or mass) flow rate through the silencer equals that flowing through the sum of the four headers.
Obviously number this depends on the gas velocity (and therefore temperature) and header length, but I can only guess at the velocity, which is making things more difficult.
My aim is to keep the cross sectional area of the entire system the same, so no additional backpressure is generated, and so that gas velocity to the very end remains equal to that in each of the headers. The 4-1 collector obviously messes this up, because of the step increase in area, but my question about the silencer area still confuses me.
I haven't found this clearly explained elsewhere in the forum, so perhaps someone could advise?
- Kronos