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Unbolting The Piping??

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Old Oct 13, 2003
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Question Unbolting The Piping??

One of my freinds with a 200sx unbolted his piping from his cat yesterday and he said that he can feel big gains. He also said that he got "MAD" back pressure from it too. Does it really help?? Taking off your piping?? or does it just make your car sound nasty??? Other than no piping this guy has a little APC filter on his throttle body
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Old Oct 13, 2003
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But he still has the cat on there?
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Old Oct 13, 2003
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Yea...the high end should increase but the low end will suck. It sounds loud too and all this is illegal.
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Old Oct 13, 2003
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what the hell do you mean by unbolting piping?
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Old Oct 13, 2003
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I don't think he's going to have much backpressure if he unbolted the piping...
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Old Oct 13, 2003
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yer over it leave it on ive done a lot of exhaust work and one time when i was changing my exhaust i started the car and drove it around with no piping it sounds like s**t and has no low end

leave it on
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Old Oct 13, 2003
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your right, his car sounds nasty. Well I looked under the body and I saw his downpipe leading to a cat, and that was it. Come on, this guy tells everybody that he has Greddy headers (which he doesn't even have) which he said gave him 50hp. Today he said that the no piping gave him 30hp, and that he took a Mustang GT. LOL
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Old Oct 13, 2003
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since we all can measure our back pressure from unbolting and then driving round
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Old Oct 14, 2003
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What really is back pressure?
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Old Oct 14, 2003
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i can't explain backpressure that well, but basically it's pressure that's needed in piping in order to allow the flow of gasses out easier. without it, there would be no pressure and all the exhaust gasses would have a hard time escaping. hmmmmm........... lol. i don't think that made sense.
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Old Oct 14, 2003
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heres a post i picked up about the myth of back pressure by a fellow named texan

THE MYTH OF BACKPRESSURE"

…is probably the most widely misunderstood concept in engine tuning. IMO, the reason this concept is so hard to get around lies in the engineering terms surrounding gas flow. Here's the most impotant ones you need to be aware of to understand the things I'm about to say:

BACKPRESSURE: Resistance to air flow; usually stated in inches H2O or PSI.
DELTA PRESSURE (aka delta P): Describes the pressure drop through a component and is the difference in pressure between two points.

One other concept needs to be covered too, and that's the idea of air pressure vs. velocity. When a moving air column picks up speed, one of the weird things that happens is it’s pressure drops. So remember through all this that the higher the air velocity for a given volume of gas, the lower it's internal pressure becomes. And remember throughout all of this that I’m no mechanical engineer, simply an enthusiast who done all the reading he can. I don’t claim that this information is the absolute truth, just that it makes sense in my eyes.

Ok, so as you can see, backpressure is actually defined as the resistance to flow. So how can backpressure help power production at any RPM? IT CAN'T. I think the reason people began to think that pressure was in important thing to have at low RPM is because of the term delta pressure. Delta pressure is what you need to produce good power at any RPM, which means that you need to have a pressure DROP when measuring pressures from the cylinder to the exhaust tract (the term "pressure" is what I think continually confuses things). The larger the delta P measurement is, the higher this pressure drop becomes. And as earlier stated, you can understand that this pressure drop means the exhaust gas velocity is increasing as it travels from the cylinder to the exhaust system. Put simply, the higher the delta P value, the faster the exhaust gasses end up traveling. So what does all this mean? It means that it's important to have gas velocity reach a certain point in order to have good power production at any RPM (traditional engine techs sited 240 ft/sec as the magic number, but this is likely outdated by now).

The effect of having larger exhaust pipe diameters (in the primary, secondary, collector and cat-back exhaust tubes) has a direct effect on gas velocity and therefore delta P (as well as backpressure levels). The larger the exhaust diameter, the slower the exhaust gasses end up going for a given amount of airflow. Now the ***** of all this tech is that one exhaust size will not work over a large RPM range, so we are left with trying to find the best compromise in sizing for good low RPM velocity without hindering higher RPM flow ability. It doesn't take a rocket scientist to understand that an engine flows a whole lot more air at 6000 RPM than at 1000 RPM, and so it also makes sense that one single pipe diameter isn't going to acheive optiaml gas velocity and pressure at both these RPM points, given the need to flow such varying volumes.

These concepts are why larger exhaust piping works well for high RPM power but hurts low RPM power; becuase is hurts gas velocity and therefore delta P at low RPM. At higher RPM however, the larger piping lets the engine breath well without having the exhuast gasses get bundled up in the system, which would produce high levels of backpressure and therefore hurt flow. Remember, managing airflow in engines is mainly about three things; maintaining laminar flow and good charge velocity, and doing both of those with varying volumes of air. Ok, so now that all this has been explained, let's cover one last concept (sorry this is getting so long, but it takes time to explain things in straight text!).

This last concept is why low velocity gas flow and backpressure hurt power production. Understand that during the exhaust stroke of a 4 stroke engine, it's not only important to get as much of the spent air/fuel mixture out of the chamber (to make room for the unburnt mixture in the intake system), it's also important that these exhaust gasses never turn around and start flowing back into the cylinder. Why would this happen? Because of valve overlap, that's why. At the end of the exhaust stroke, not only does the piston start moving back down the bore to ingest the fresh mixture, but the intake valve also opens to expose the fresh air charge to this event. In modern automotive 4 stroke engines valve overlap occurs at all RPM, so for a short period of time the exhaust system is open to these low pressure influences which can suck things back towards the cylinder. if the exhaust gas velocity is low and pressure is high in the system, this will make everything turn around and go the opposite direction it's supposed to. If these gasses reach the cylinder they will dilute the incoming mixture with unburnable gasses and take up valuable space within the combustion chamber, thus lowering power output (and potentially pushing the intake charge temp beyond the fuel’s knock resistance). So having good velocity and therefore low pressure in the system is absolutely imperative to good power production at any RPM, you just have to remember that these concepts are also dependent on total flow volume. The overall volume of flow is important because it is entirely possible to have both high velocity and high pressure in the system, if there is simply not enough exhaust piping to handle the needed airflow.

It’s all about finding a compromise to work at both high and low RPM on most cars, but that’s a bit beyond the scope of this post. All I am trying to show here is how the term backpressure is in reference to a bad exhaust system, not one that creates good low RPM torque. You can just as easily have backpressure at low RPM too, which would also hurt low RPM cylinder scavenging and increase the potential for gas reversion. And understand that these tuning concepts will also affect cam timing, though that is again probably beyond the scope of this post. At any rate, hope this helps, peace. "

-here's a reply to the above post-

"I've been seeing a resurgence of the backpressure misnomer, but didn't have the time or inclination to write it up. So, again, thanks.

There is one thing I'd like to add to texan's work:
Exhaust Scavenging
In essence, this is the opposite of the exhaust reversion that texan describes.

Reversion: at the beginning of the intake stroke during cam overlap, exaust gas in the header is under high pressure (negative delta P) and is pushed back into the cylinder, diluting the new air/fuel charge.

Scavenging: at the beginning of the intake stroke during cam overlap, the momentum of the exiting exhaust gasses creates a brief vacuum (positive delta P) in the header, pulling out the remaining exhaust gases from the combustion chamber, and allowing the new air/fuel charge to be full-strength.

Scavenging is also the reason for differently shaped headers (4-2-1, 4-1) and collectors. We use the momentum of exiting exhaust from one cylinder to scavenge exhaust from another that is next in the firing order! The different shapes allow for this to happen at different airflow velocities thus at different RPM bands.

Scavenging takes advantage of the momentum of the exiting gasses. In essence, the fast moving exhaust pulse pulls a vacuum behind it. Momentum is mass times velocity. So not only do we need to keep the velocity high to prevent reversion - but it greatly improves the scavenging effect.

Thus we have a balancing act (as others have pointed out). We want to minimize friction to lower the backpressure as much as possible - larger pipes have less friction because they have less surface area per unit volume. But we want to increase the delta P as much as possible to prevent reversion and increase scavenging effects - smaller pipes increase delta P because they increase velocity.

**********************

nice read texan
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Old Oct 14, 2003
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omfg i understood none of that. Oh well, i think i'll just keep my piping.
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Old Oct 15, 2003
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I seriously read that post but I can't remember a thing from it LMAO. So is the 2.25'' piping good on my car forever, or should I get bigger piping when I get internals???
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Old Oct 15, 2003
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unless you go turbo, 2.25 is good. If turbo, or really crazily built up internals, you should get 2.5. Although, I don't know about this part, but the stock tubing might have some tight bends in it that aftermarket tubing wouldn't?
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Old Oct 15, 2003
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Even if someone were to upgrade pistons, regrind cam, and say, put an intake manifold, I seriously doubt you'd need anything bigger than a 2.25" exhaust.
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Old Oct 15, 2003
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if you had a turbo d17 or k20 i would get 2.5 but other than that you don't need anything bigger than 2.25.

if you have a sick turbo with a sick built engine get 3 inches... such as a k20a with built internals and a tubro boosting 35 pounds...(dc5@em2)
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Old Oct 15, 2003
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haha, 35 pounds. Thats pure insanity. That would be my dream car...35 pounds...mmmmmmm
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