Exhaust System

Author
Discussion

IBROKER

Original Poster:

658 posts

265 months

Friday 21st November 2003
quotequote all
I am thinking of having a bespoke stainless system built for my 2.5 with 4 pipes from the back of the car, obviuosly ditching the cats.

I'm not a techie so any pitfalls anybody knows about or things that I need to know would be appreciated

joust

14,622 posts

266 months

Friday 21st November 2003
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There was a bespoke 4 pipe one before (there is a picture around somewhere) - details here
http://autos.groups.yahoo.com/group/noble-m12/message/419

I'd check with the factory though, as I'd imagine if it changes the back pressure the mapping may get thrown out.....

J

LaurenceFrost

691 posts

259 months

Friday 21st November 2003
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Most turbocharged cars that have their CAT removed are renowned for boost increases, so be careful.

Generally speaking, an exhaust system that flows more freely causes lower backpressure. With lower backpressure the exhaust gasses leave the engine too quickly and as a result the engine runs a little ‘cooler’ than usual at lower revs. This causes the engines performance to suffer a little, but what is lost low-down is usually more than reclaimed at higher revs.

Some exhaust manufacturers design exhausts so they restrict exhaust gasses at lower revs to generate more heat, and then open up once the turbo starts to generate significant pressure to combat this problem.

To summarise, a simple free-flowing exhaust will probably loose you some of the low-down grunt you had, but in return, you will see some good gains further up the revs. Oh and the noise

I hope this is of some use to you
Laurence

guysh

2,254 posts

290 months

Friday 21st November 2003
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Well I have my twin rear exit exhaust system for sale if anyone's interested - only suitable for a 2.5 litre car (mines now a 3). Cost me around 400 (150 would be fair) - it will fit straight into a car without any mods (except two holes in the black grill) - you may need to remove the KAT pipe and have a KAT replacement pipe however.

>> Edited by guysh on Friday 21st November 16:54

SpeedDemon

55 posts

253 months

Saturday 22nd November 2003
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Hi Lawrence,

While that can be true for a normally aspirated car (decrease backpressure too much, and your low-end will suffer), the same is not the case for a turbocharged car.

There's really no such thing as "too big an exhaust" for a turbocharged engine. The more the exhaust flows, the better the turbo will spool up. Certainly, at some point you reach diminishing returns where the turbo won't spool any faster (the Noble is close to that point already), but you will not hurt your bottom end power by improving exhaust flow. The turbo itself provides all the backpressure the engine could need.

Best,
Marc

joospeed

4,473 posts

285 months

Saturday 22nd November 2003
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Yup, if you increase the pressure differential across the exhaust impellor you decrease it's response time. The noble has mapped wastegate anyway and relatively small turbos on the earlier 2.5 cars and they're controlling the boost off the ecu. They also spool up very quickly so not too much to worry about there.

I work about 2 miles from John Nobles so get to see all sorts of lovely things being played with on the rollers.. although trying to get serious power from the catted cars looks a bit difficult at the mo, but the power figures I was seeing down there the other day means you guys have some pretty serious pieces of kit to look forward to.

The noble is a great car

shadowninja

77,495 posts

289 months

Saturday 22nd November 2003
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as if the damn things don't accelerate quickly enough already

IBROKER

Original Poster:

658 posts

265 months

Monday 24th November 2003
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Guysh

Is yours an after fit from the factory


>> Edited by IBROKER on Monday 24th November 09:13

LaurenceFrost

691 posts

259 months

Monday 24th November 2003
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SpeedDemon said:

There's really no such thing as "too big an exhaust" for a turbocharged engine. The more the exhaust flows, the better the turbo will spool up. Certainly, at some point you reach diminishing returns where the turbo won't spool any faster (the Noble is close to that point already), but you will not hurt your bottom end power by improving exhaust flow. The turbo itself provides all the backpressure the engine could need.


This is interesting, because every turbocharged car I have ever driven with an aftermarket exhaust has never felt quite as brawny BEFORE the car makes any boost as with the standard exhaust.

Most of my friends agree with this. Perhaps it's just a mental thing

Laurence

joust

14,622 posts

266 months

Monday 24th November 2003
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Quick google seems to suggest the best exhaust for a turbo car is none at all....

www.extrememotorsports.com/g2stage/stage1.htm
www.fullboost.com.au/articles/techinfo/exhausts.html
www.zhaust.com/tech/0201/exhaust/

and this one seems quite comprehensive
www.vishnutuning.com/exhaust101.htm

J

LaurenceFrost

691 posts

259 months

Monday 24th November 2003
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Thanks for the links Joust they are really interesting.

I was led to believe that, "The best exhaust for a turbocharged car is none at all!" But then I read a post from an automotive engineer who is very clued up in the topic area indeed. This is his answer to the question, "Is the best exhaust for a turbo no exhaust at all?":

"No, but if you want an uncontrollable turbine-effect motor that would be only any good as a drag car then maybe yes... even then I doubt it.
You need exhaust piping to provide good control and balance to the turbines output.

If the turbos are allowed to 'run free' then they will not heat up until say 4000rpm at that point the massive heat shock (simple BTU quantities will heat the Turbine unevenly and kill it quite quickly."

Looks like we have an interesting debate on our hands...

P.S. Joust: I haven't seen your car about for a long time now. Has the wet weather put you off

joust

14,622 posts

266 months

Monday 24th November 2003
quotequote all
LaurenceFrost said:
Thanks for the links Joust they are really interesting.
No problems - it's amazing what you can find with a bit of googling - unfortunatly I haven't time to read any of them!

LaurenceFrost said:
You need exhaust piping to provide good control and balance to the turbines output.
Must be said that in my "engineer mode" it would be my first assumption, that to have a controlled system you need a bit of positive feedback, and an exhaust gives you that. I'd always thought the reason Tubi et. all were not just "a pipe and a bunch of boxes" was to optimise the back pressure whilst removing nasty effects of the "normal" exhaust.
LaurenceFrost said:
If the turbos are allowed to 'run free' then they will not heat up until say 4000rpm at that point the massive heat shock (simple BTU quantities will heat the Turbine unevenly and kill it quite quickly."
Not sure what you mean here. The turbo surely heats up due to two effects - the outcoming exhaust gasses, and the normal compression of a gas raising it's temprature. I'd imagine the latter is the "worse" one - is that what you mean?
LaurenceFrost said:
P.S. Joust: I haven't seen your car about for a long time now. Has the wet weather put you off
No - I'm around. I drive it into work every day at the moment - but then that's mainly "North"

J

guysh

2,254 posts

290 months

Monday 24th November 2003
quotequote all
The One for sale is one I had made up from parts from Jetex. - The one on the car came with the 3 litre engine etc.

IBROKER said:
Guysh

Is yours an after fit from the factory


>> Edited by IBROKER on Monday 24th November 09:13

ibroker

Original Poster:

658 posts

265 months

Tuesday 25th November 2003
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guysh

One pipe either side or two. Any pics of the back of the car you could mail me

Thanks

joust

14,622 posts

266 months

Tuesday 25th November 2003
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ibroker

Original Poster:

658 posts

265 months

Tuesday 25th November 2003
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Thanks Justin

guysh

2,254 posts

290 months

Tuesday 25th November 2003
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As Justin pointed out - 2 but the way in which it's setup you could probably have two either side it you wanted - just by replacing the pipe that the tailpipes come from with a longer one.

ibroker said:
guysh

One pipe either side or two. Any pics of the back of the car you could mail me

Thanks

guysh

2,254 posts

290 months

Tuesday 25th November 2003
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I also still have my original 2.5 exhsust if anyone want's it to chop about a bit.

ibroker

Original Poster:

658 posts

265 months

Friday 5th December 2003
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Guy

did you get my mail