T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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766.5 | More exhausts | IOSG::MARSHALL | Waterloo Sunset | Thu Nov 08 1990 15:47 | 8 |
| Is it legal to use a "straight through" silencer on public roads?
Will it be unbearably loud? Will the neighbours stop talking to me?
What will the effect of a straight-through exhaust be on the engine
(eg performance, mpg, engine longevity), which, coming from a boring old Sierra,
was presumably designed to work with a baffled exhaust?
Scott
|
766.6 | | MARVIN::RUSLING | Hastings Upper Layers | Thu Nov 08 1990 17:15 | 9 |
|
When I first fired up the Marlin, it had just the side pipes, it
sounded like a Vulcan bomber and the flames were around 2' long.
A good box should create a low pressure zone that attempts to pull out
the exhaust (at the very least it should not create any back pressure).
So, I guess it depends if you like being conspicuous or not...
Dave
|
766.7 | | CHEFS::OSBORNEC | | Thu Nov 08 1990 18:04 | 15 |
|
On road-going 4-strokes straight through pipes are just a noisy bore, &
will not make the vehicle significantly faster at all. Even racing
machinery being pushed below 110db is not suffering a noticeable (in
feel) difference.
Racing 2-strokes are quite different, but you're not likely to see those
in your average commuterbile. Silly little boys on 50cc mopeds tend to
lose performance with badly designed expansion chambers, but boys will
be boys ............
Pal of mine has an XK120 with straight through pipes in 1/8 inch
copper! Loud, but deep. No tinny reverberation, but at least he takes
it on the road very rarely -- but sounds great at a sprint.
|
766.8 | Clarification | IOSG::MARSHALL | Waterloo Sunset | Fri Nov 09 1990 12:54 | 35 |
| Perhaps I'd better clarify what I mean.
I don't want the car to annoy the neighbours, but I want it to sound like a
sports car and not a Ford Sierra. I was recommended to get a straight-through
silencer to achieve this purpose.
This looks, externally, exactly like an ordianary silencer box. The difference
is if you look in one end you can see out of the other. The baffle structure
is around the edges. Pretty picture time:
__________________ ______________________
1) |XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX| 2) |XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX|
_____|XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX|_____ _____|_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ X|_____
| X
_____ _____ _____ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _| X _____
|XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX| |XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX|
|XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX| |______________________|
"Straight through" silencer; Ordinary silencer; the exhaust gases
XXX is the baffle material must pass through the baffle
3)
_______________________________
_______________________________
Straight through pipe; no baffle!
My query is what will the difference in volume and "timbre" of noise be between
the three systems? I assume racing cars have (3)?
Most production car exhausts have a "silencer" box and a "resonator" box. What
is the difference between these in terms of construction and function?
Scott
|
766.9 | Ansa exhaust? | ZPOVC::TEOHEN | | Mon Jun 10 1991 18:47 | 8 |
| So much about Janspeed and Perry exhuasts, what about Ansa Marmite
exhaust? It's supposed to be high performance stuff from Italy. Has
anyone had experience with this? like on Alfa cars.
Feedback please!
TTH
|
766.10 | Do they do an Ansa Vegemite version too ? ;-) | CRATE::RUTTER | Rut The Nut | Mon Jun 10 1991 19:28 | 16 |
| � So much about Janspeed and Perry exhuasts, what about Ansa Marmite
� exhaust? It's supposed to be high performance stuff from Italy. Has
I think that Ansa exhaust systems have been recommended in a few
different mags from time to time. Then again, they may only have
been repeating the claims from the handouts that they receive...
Another name which appears to have a good product is Jetex.
I have only had experience of a couple of non-standard exhausts,
from companies which make (or have made) their own systems for the
type of cars that they deal in (eg GM exhausts from Peter Maiden,
Ford - not mine ! - system from Autocross). Other than that, I
have to base my judgement on what I read in the monthlies.
J.R.
|
766.11 | Jetex ??? Dunno! | ZPOVC::TEOHEN | | Tue Jun 11 1991 16:58 | 6 |
| Never heard of Jetex? Where is it from? Is it good, compared with
Janspeed, Ansa...?
Well...
TTH
|
766.12 | 3-2-1 Liftoff ! | CHEST::RAWSON | Fnarr! Fnarr! | Tue Jun 11 1991 17:13 | 9 |
| > Never heard of Jetex? Where is it from? Is it good, compared with
> Janspeed, Ansa...?
I always thought they made those rocket engines that you put on model
planes ! You remember, the ones that you lit and they ran for only a
few seconds. Thinking of which that principle has been adopted by a
few motor manufacturers.
Alex :^)
|
766.13 | Jetex, cheap exhausts.... | COMICS::COOMBER | Endurance racers do it all night | Tue Jun 11 1991 17:28 | 29 |
| I have heard of jetex, not too sure where they come from . Many of the
after sales exhaust folk sell them and I know for sure Graham Goode
sell them. I personally have not dealt with them but my brother bought
a 2" bore system for his Toyota Corrola 16v, known as a sprinter
everywhere else outside the uk. It is very differnet from the normal
Corrola and you have to be very carefull when buying after sales parts.
To cut a long story short , the exhuast turned up , without even
offering it up there was no way in this world it was going to fit . To
be honest they sound a bunch of cowboys. The system to fit would have
needed hacking around, bodging a joint with the original down pipe, not
very good for a supposedly tailor made system.
After taking the system back and to jetex, well a box of assorted bent
bits of pipe and silencers would be a better description, being told "
oh those bits are wrong, what you need is these", different shape bits
of pipe, there was still no way it was goint to fit. After much head
scratching the exhaust when back to Graham Goode in exhange for a
refund , complete. A Janspeed system was then fitted, construction
seemed stronger, design better and it fitted without hacking around.
I don't know if that incident with Jetex is normal of a isolated case,
you can make your own mind up, but Jetex were about �100 cheaper that
Janspeed, I guess that says enough.
Garry
|
766.14 | Ansa exhaust + K&N filter | ZPOVC::TEOHEN | | Tue Jun 11 1991 18:37 | 15 |
| Ansa exhaust comes ready to fit on various makes/models of cars. I have
one tried out (fitted by the workshop sales guy) and it proved to be
smoother in rev on my Alfa 33 1.7 Cloverleaf. Well, not the entire
exhaust system, only the tailpipe with muffler/baffler. The exhaust
looks beautiful, stainless steel chromed! I'm tempted to try the entire
exhaust system including the manifolds. Costs around S$400/- or ~140
pounds. Is that cheap or expensive? Will that really help add more
power and better fuel consumption? Has anyone of you had this fitted
and how was it?
Incidentally, I had K&N air filters fitted the other day when the
performance has been markedly good. However, it's too noisy when
accelerating hard; the car seems to have lost the "Alfa sound"!
TTH
|
766.15 | | NCEIS1::CHEVAUX | Patrick Chevaux, Nice, 828-6995 | Wed Jun 12 1991 11:24 | 3 |
| .12� I always thought they made those rocket engines that you put on model
Don't you mean JATO ?
|
766.16 | I remember when I were a lad.... | NSDC::SIMPSON | Bourr� comme un triton | Thu Jun 13 1991 08:48 | 23 |
| RE: -.1
NO, not JATO! Jetex were for model aircraft, and were about 2�" (7 cm) long.
I used mine on free flight gliders.
Jetex in two pieces - a tube and a cap. There was a spring-loaded piece of wire
to clip the two together firmly, and seal them. You put solid-fuel tablets into
the tube.
There was a tiny hole in one end of the tube, through which you feed a bit of
fuse. You lit the fuse, and when it had lit the tablet up, exhaust fumes came
out through the little hole. At this point, you threw your glider, and hoped
that it got going....
JATO are used for getting military aircraft off the ground when they have a
heavy payload on a short runway.
So, the two products use the same principles - its just a question of scale!
Cheers
Steve
|
766.17 | :^) | NCEIS1::CHEVAUX | Patrick Chevaux, Nice, 828-6995 | Thu Jun 13 1991 09:11 | 6 |
| .16�NO, not JATO! Jetex were for model aircraft, and were about 2�" (7 cm) long.
.16�I used mine on free flight gliders.
:^) :^) :^)
... I also used JETEX on model aircrafts, years ago ....
|
766.18 | Cars too | NEARLY::GOODENOUGH | | Fri Jun 14 1991 12:34 | 4 |
| They were also used in model racing cars - Jetex made the whole kit.
Great fun.
Jeff.
|
766.19 | More childhood reminiscences | MALLET::BARKER | Pretty Damn Cosmic | Fri Jun 14 1991 15:09 | 7 |
| I also played with Jetex engines while a yougster. The fuse was also
very useful if you were into making large bangs with other chemicals 'nuff said.
I haven't seen them around for 15 years. I don't know if they are still
available whether they were felt to be unsafe, the company went bust or what.
Nigel
|
766.20 | | NEARLY::GOODENOUGH | | Fri Jun 14 1991 16:47 | 2 |
| I expect the kids started sniffing them ...
|
766.21 | | SUBURB::VEALES | Simon Veale - DEC Park, Reading | Fri Jun 14 1991 16:55 | 5 |
|
I seem to remember it being difficult even to breathe near burning JETEX,
let alone sniff it (no I didn't try) !!
Didn't it give off ammonia or something ?
|
766.22 | two more names | PCOJCT::MILBERG | My boss called- Red, Blue or White? | Sat Jun 15 1991 05:29 | 10 |
| combining the original topic - brands of exhaust systems
with the sidebar topic - childhood reminiscing
1. are Abarth mufflers still made? I had one (bought in Rome) on
my 1967 Fiat 850 Spyder.
2. Are Stebro mufflers still made? I HAVE one on the 1969 Elan.
-Barry-
|
766.23 | Ansa+Janspeed -> flying Alfa? | ZPOVC::TEOHEN | | Tue Jun 18 1991 13:29 | 9 |
| I sent my car for servicing today. My service adviser recommended a
combination of Ansa for manifolds/extractor and Janspeed tailpipe for
the exhaust system for my Alfa 1.7 carburetter. He said this will give
smoother rev and boost performance. How is this true? Has anyone
experienced with such a combination?
Janspeed is rather expensive, though!
TTH
|