
i think it's have something with exaust pipe, engine is always in same place in car. but you can change exaust pipe in her length, with shorter pipe engine work optimal but not producing as near much gasses from exaust, same is for revert situation. When exaust pipe is long, you suffocate pure engine power for more gasses. It's just matter of preferences if you want bigger power or gasses from exaust for coanda.soumyakd wrote:Can anyone please explain me as to how the change in length of exhaust lines affect the power output of an engine ? Was going through a forum regarding a recent change in exhaust lengths and how it boosted the performance of the engine. Is it due to back pressure accumulation in the lines ?
This is pretty much my view except for “…help drawing gas out of the cylinder”. The inertia of the exhaust gas flow can maintain flow after ΔP drops. Pressure waves are acoustical and a different animal.matt21 wrote:it has to do with pressure waves.
When the exhaust valve opens, a positive pressure wave is running down the exhaust pipe. At the open end of the exhaust this wave is reflected, but with opposite sign. So you have a negative pressure valve runnig up the exhaust towards the valve.
At the valve this wave can help drawing gas out of the cylinder.
Without variable length geometries you can tune your exhaust system for one rpm only. In general shorter exhaust pipe shift the resonance to higher rpm and vice versa.
The same effect is used at the inlet tract where you have a negative pressure wave when the valve opens.
You can also use helmholtz resonators to tune the system.
I have to disagre here. The effect of reflecting pressure waves, either with same value or in verted, is used extensively in the tuning of an two-stroke engine, hence the use of expansion champers. By using these chambers you can use the effect for a wider range of rpm, instead for an exhaust pipe with fixed diameter and length. Still you have one optimum rpm, where the effect is the greatest.olefud wrote:This is pretty much my view except for “…help drawing gas out of the cylinder”.
There are (at least) two ways the exhaust can affect power; inertial flow and acoustical pressure waves. Inertial exhaust flow is effective to scavenge residual exhaust gases and to initiate intake flow –though it can scavenge the intake flow too. However, inertial flow is not dependent on the exhaust pipe length.matt21 wrote:I have to disagre here. The effect of reflecting pressure waves, either with same value or in verted, is used extensively in the tuning of an two-stroke engine, hence the use of expansion champers. By using these chambers you can use the effect for a wider range of rpm, instead for an exhaust pipe with fixed diameter and length. Still you have one optimum rpm, where the effect is the greatest.olefud wrote:This is pretty much my view except for “…help drawing gas out of the cylinder”.
For multi-cylinder engines, also the joint of the primary exhaust pipes is of grat importance. This joint acts as open end to the primary pipe and you have interaction between the single cylinders.
For two stroke chambers:
http://www.spudfiles.com/forums/files/2 ... st_852.jpg
Further info:
http://www.motorcycle.com/how-to/how-tw ... -3423.html
not really truematt21 wrote: Without variable length geometries you can tune your exhaust system for one rpm only.