First question is can anyone identify this exhaust system and is it any good.
Second seems a good time to make sure I have a reasonable manifold on there, if I have this Y piece does that mean I would be running a LCB??
Thanks in advance
Posted 18 March 2018 - 05:39 PM
Posted 18 March 2018 - 05:46 PM
check your engine mounts and that looks
Posted 18 March 2018 - 06:12 PM
if you have a Y piece you have to have an LCB if it is a good one who knows.
Posted 18 March 2018 - 07:04 PM
Looks like a fletcher or the likes exhaust. Not good at all. Way too big for powah.
Posted 18 March 2018 - 07:26 PM
thanksif you have a Y piece you have to have an LCB if it is a good one who knows.
I suspected as much! I imagine powah been said in Tony Bellew-esk voice!Looks like a fletcher or the likes exhaust. Not good at all. Way too big for powah.
Posted 18 March 2018 - 10:18 PM
Posted 18 March 2018 - 10:39 PM
An RC40 1.75 diameter will be fine, I have a single box RC40 on my estate and it sounds good without blowing your ears
Posted 18 March 2018 - 10:54 PM
A good exhaust is one where the diameter of the pipe is both correct and unchanged from the end of the manifold to the final exit.
For a 1275 to 1330 engine running at up to around 6700 rpm a 1.75" diameter pipe is optimum and this should be a single pipe right to the final exit.
The reason for this is that the exhaust gas molecules need to be at a good speed and pressure all the way. If the final cross sectional area is increased, the molecules slow and lose their inertia which needs to draw the upstream molecules along the pipe. Increasing the cross-sectional area of the exhaust pipe reduces the velocity of the molecules and locally increases the gas pressure, thus preventing the 'extractor' effect of the constant diameter single pipe.
Indeed, it is hard to envisage a poorer design of exhaust than the one you have. It will be costing you several bhp and torque and probably increasing the fuel consumption.
The best system is a Maniflow 1.75" exhaust system with a 'cherry bomb' after the end of the LCB and a standard box at the rear sub-frame. It can be a centre-exit or one which exits at the LHS end of the rear bumper, as the original Mini design. You can get away with a single silencer, but on a 1275 it would be a bit noisy at higher revs. Looks better as well.
Posted 19 March 2018 - 01:28 AM
A good exhaust is one where the diameter of the pipe is both correct and unchanged from the end of the manifold to the final exit.
That renders the RCM not good then doesn't it?
Posted 19 March 2018 - 09:32 AM
A good exhaust is one where the diameter of the pipe is both correct and unchanged from the end of the manifold to the final exit.
For a 1275 to 1330 engine running at up to around 6700 rpm a 1.75" diameter pipe is optimum and this should be a single pipe right to the final exit.
The reason for this is that the exhaust gas molecules need to be at a good speed and pressure all the way. If the final cross sectional area is increased, the molecules slow and lose their inertia which needs to draw the upstream molecules along the pipe. Increasing the cross-sectional area of the exhaust pipe reduces the velocity of the molecules and locally increases the gas pressure, thus preventing the 'extractor' effect of the constant diameter single pipe.
Indeed, it is hard to envisage a poorer design of exhaust than the one you have. It will be costing you several bhp and torque and probably increasing the fuel consumption.
The best system is a Maniflow 1.75" exhaust system with a 'cherry bomb' after the end of the LCB and a standard box at the rear sub-frame. It can be a centre-exit or one which exits at the LHS end of the rear bumper, as the original Mini design. You can get away with a single silencer, but on a 1275 it would be a bit noisy at higher revs. Looks better as well.
Something like this ??
http://www.minispare...31.aspx|Back to
How much difference is there between side exit and rear exit??
Will I also have to change the Y piece and LCB if I get a smaller exhaust?
Edited by dojo, 19 March 2018 - 10:08 AM.
Posted 19 March 2018 - 01:09 PM
Posted 03 April 2018 - 06:28 AM
Posted 03 April 2018 - 08:36 AM
Posted 03 April 2018 - 09:16 AM
Posted 03 April 2018 - 10:30 AM
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