STRAIGHT PIPED! E36 PURE SEX

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Administrator
Staff member
That's nice but quiet loud. Are you going to be happy with that all the time? Consider get twin tailpieces :thumbs:
 

alexzz

///Member
Yes, the twin pipes end of month for the whistle :thumbs:
To be honest, i dont care about my neighbours, they d**** anyways :roflol:
and not too loud inside either.
 

Mr.k

Member
alexzz said:
Yes, the twin pipes end of month for the whistle :thumbs:
To be honest, i dont care about my neighbours, they d**** anyways :roflol:
and not too loud inside either.

+100000 hahahahaha
 

alexzz

///Member
Gbmw said:
a1exander said:
Just a short question.............what about backpressure?

Educate me please, what's "backpressure" ?

I've heard about people saying it hasn't got enough back pressure. Not too sure why they make free flow systems.
 
http://www.autozine.org/technical_school/engine/Intake_exhaust.html#Variable-exhaust

And these two posts from PH explain the term for us knuckleheads who don't like graphs and waves
http://www.pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?t=1203932

You always want the lowest pressure possible in the relevant branch of the manifold as the exhaust valve opens as this will allow as much of the contents of the cylinder to be ejected as possible before the valve closes, thus allowing more oxygen to be drawn into the cylinder on the next intake stroke.

As I understand it, well tuned NA or SC engine exhausts use the kinetic energy of the exhaust gas from the previous cylinder to create a partial vacuum in the manifold at exactly the right moment (this is called exhaust gas scavenging); this isn't really possible on a turbocharged engine because the turbo restricts the exhaust gas flow too much. Thus in a turbocharged car, you want the air to simply flow as freely as possible to the exhaust outlet; however, for other engines back-pressure is used as part of the tuning technique to align the pulses correctly, so fitting a freer flowing exhaust to a N/A car can actually reduce power.


ETA: As a side note, I think this is part of the reason that Imprezas sound as they do - if they were NA, they would need the manifold headers to be of equal length in order for scavenging to work consistently. As they are turbocharged, Subaru couldn't use scavenging anyway, so they could make the headers unequal in length, meaning that gas from different cylinders has to travel a different distance to the exhaust tips, creating that stereotypical off-beat thrum. Theoretically, I see no reason that you couldn't get a turbocharged inline-4 to sound like a Subaru by artificially fiddling with the manifold branch length.

What kambites said (which seems to often be the case when it comes to powertrains!). It's a fairly common conception that back pressure is bad, with the idea being that it stops exhaust flowing effectively out of the cylinder and robs you of cylinder space for the fresh charge. However, it's not as simple as that, and while having no back pressure is better than having loads right by your cylinders' exhaust valves, what you actually want to do is shape the manifold (and engine timing) to cause some pressure elsewhere, and a vacuum near the valves. As there's only going to be a finite amount of gas in the exhaust, deliberately raising the pressure in one place reduces it in others, which is beneficial when done correctly.

If you make the exhaust flow more freely, yes you get less obstruction to the exhaust gas escaping, but you also lose the lower-pressure vacuum near the cylinders, and don't scavenge all the exhaust gas out as effectively. Resonance waves exist in the manifold (this applies to the intake one too), and are very finely tuned so that each cylinder's exhaust gas assists the next one in scavenging more thoroughly. Buggering around with it makes you unlikely to achieve the same benefit.

On a turbocharged car, as has been said, you cannot scavenge effectively anyway so needn't worry. But for naturally aspirated engines, while "too much" or "incorrectly placed" back pressure is bad, do not think removing it completely is the best way forward!
 

Gbmw

///Member
:thumbs: :thumbs: Makes sense :=):
oh Alexzz..... I like the new sound bud. Just finish it with the tail pieces IMO.
 

328ii

New member
From my biker days i like it loud - others don't.

Back pressure is when your boss is on your ass for being late, etc.

8?>
 

DieselFan

Honorary ///Member
Is it a straight 63mm pipe? If it were my car. I'd add a small back box with duel outlets for twin pipes. But it sounds good. Too loud for me but good

Sent from Samsung S5
 

ver328i

Well-known member
Sounds good:thumbs:

I Hope your car has lots of GO

I know of a very loud e36 325i - in my area - thats an absolute donkey. Its irritating to hear him trying to go fast when the car refuses to. Forced to listen to him "flat footing" the slow ass car 3 area's away:nonono:

So, Loud and fast - YES:thumbs: but loud and slow :thumbdo:
 

alexzz

///Member
Goezaar said:
Sounds good:thumbs:

I Hope your car has lots of GO

I know of a very loud e36 325i - in my area - thats an absolute donkey. Its irritating to hear him trying to go fast when the car refuses to. Forced to listen to him "flat footing" the slow ass car 3 area's away:nonono:

So, Loud and fast - YES:thumbs: but loud and slow :thumbdo:

it goes :rollsmile:
 

danieljames

Active member
Shit sweet boet. Got a duel 50mm with two boxes on mine....i can only imagine how urs must sound flying past. I envy the guys walking on the street when I drive by....Coz the car is a lot softer inside than it is outside

sent from... a phone
 
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