Please download the latest Flash Player here

Homepage send us an email homepage Buckle Up -Racers against Street Racing
See homepage for most recent events Featured Rides Our Reader's Rides - submit your own! FREE classifieds! Car Audio garage auto tuning tips Automotive links
T&T's Largest Automotive Website: 8000+ visitors a day; 15,000+ registered members; HUGE classifieds
 
Want to get your ad here? Click for details...

 Garage2NRides  FAQFAQ   SearchSearch   MemberlistMemberlist   UsergroupsUsergroups   RegisterRegister   ProfileProfile   Private MessagesPrivate Messages   Log inLog in 


legacy guys with exhausts, help
Goto page Previous  1, 2, 3
 
View unanswered posts
Post new topic   Reply to topic   printer-friendly view    trinituner.com Forum Index -> SUBARU
View previous topic :: View next topic  
Author Message
Ragnarok
3NE 2NR for life


Joined: 26 Feb 2008
Tech posts: 150
Location: None
My 2NRide:

PostPosted: Sat Oct 17, 2009 10:06 am
   Post subject:
Reply with quote

^^^Or i could bring in a nice zerosports or hks downpipe for you....
Back to top
View user's profile Send private message AIM Address Yahoo Messenger MSN Messenger
copper_shot
Sweet on this forum


Joined: 10 Apr 2005
Tech posts: 290
Location: VIP
My 2NRide: Subaru Legacy GT

PostPosted: Sat Oct 17, 2009 11:44 am
   Post subject:
Reply with quote

jadakiss wrote:

Im also concerned about buying an AM DP and it not fitting properly...i tink i heard copper having some issues like that....thats why i was leaning towards a Farley DP instead...but i wud have really liked an AM one Confused


the US Downpipe is not the same as the downpipe for the JDM legacy

well its the same bolt up, but the flange that bolts onto the turbo is different

so basically you need to cut off your flange from your stock downpipe and cut out the flange that came with the US downpipe and weld it
everything else bolts on.

---------------

aside from that

i heard the farley exhaust, i'm sure it performs great
excellent build and quality of work, if i wasnt told i would have thinked its an HKS or some other good brand.

but... it was too noisy for me

in the end, i decided to stick with this
invidia 3" Catless Downpipe & removed the other catalyst \
on idle sounds like stock, on high RPMs its roars a little louder ( a good little that is)
and it peforms great!

after hearing a couple legacys with aftermarket barrels i decided to stick with the stock barrels, i cant take that noise everyday (daily driven), if i ever decide to change them i'd definitely go with the HKS Silent Power, thats the best sounding IMO
Back to top
View user's profile Send private message
jadakiss
3NE 2NR for life


Joined: 21 Jan 2008
Tech posts: 229
Location: Insyde Mrs Asgarali :-)
My 2NRide: Subaru Legacy Spec. B

PostPosted: Sat Oct 17, 2009 11:51 am
   Post subject:
Reply with quote

^^^ i totally agree with you..i love the farley exhaust's but the sound draws too much attention. I'm still goin for that sleeper look (and sound lol)

I don't mind alil roar at WOT but im sure as hell keping my stock barrels like u did copper_shot,. I drive almost 1hr to work at mornings and i'd be hard pressed to say i want to hear all that noise for start to end...

Thanks again for the info guys Mr. Green Ragnarok, i will do some research on the types u stated above..
Back to top
View user's profile Send private message
copper_shot
Sweet on this forum


Joined: 10 Apr 2005
Tech posts: 290
Location: VIP
My 2NRide: Subaru Legacy GT

PostPosted: Sat Oct 17, 2009 12:31 pm
   Post subject:
Reply with quote

now.. if you're bored...

you can go with the hogzaust lol

simply add a couple washers to leave a gap between the pipe and the barrel

to give you that "aftermarket exhaust sound"

lol good thing about this, after a couple drives and you're fedup of the sound you can go back to your stock sound.
its a good thing to try if you're thinkin about going with an aftermarket exhaust to see if you can live with the sound.

btw, doesnt sound like an exhaust leak

try it this weekend if your bored, a 15 mins install





Last edited by copper_shot on Sat Oct 17, 2009 12:36 pm; edited 2 times in total
Back to top
View user's profile Send private message
RB25-DET
Street 2NR


Joined: 03 Apr 2009
Tech posts: 50

My 2NRide:

PostPosted: Sat Oct 17, 2009 12:34 pm
   Post subject:
Reply with quote

Nice one coppers!!!! Laughing
Back to top
View user's profile Send private message MSN Messenger
Flex030
3NE2NR is my LIFE


Joined: 25 May 2008
Tech posts: 808

My 2NRide:

PostPosted: Sat Oct 17, 2009 1:22 pm
   Post subject:
Reply with quote

Yeah coppers good one.... Wink

But i doh like the sound for a leggy IMO.
Back to top
View user's profile Send private message
nemesis
Ricer


Joined: 09 Jun 2004
Tech posts: 24
Location: Colorado
My 2NRide:

PostPosted: Wed Oct 21, 2009 9:15 pm
   Post subject:
Reply with quote

Zerosports downpipe HKS Hi-Power Silents!
Back to top
View user's profile Send private message MSN Messenger
Ragnarok
3NE 2NR for life


Joined: 26 Feb 2008
Tech posts: 150
Location: None
My 2NRide:

PostPosted: Wed Oct 21, 2009 9:40 pm
   Post subject:
Reply with quote

^^^^Have the HKS silent power already,shipping in the HKS downpipe....
Back to top
View user's profile Send private message AIM Address Yahoo Messenger MSN Messenger
copper_shot
Sweet on this forum


Joined: 10 Apr 2005
Tech posts: 290
Location: VIP
My 2NRide: Subaru Legacy GT

PostPosted: Thu Oct 22, 2009 12:06 am
   Post subject:
Reply with quote

nemesis wrote:
Zerosports downpipe HKS Hi-Power Silents!
\

i typed this before and didnt post it

but of all the exhausts i heard on the leggys
the HKS silent power are the best sounding, very quiet and nice tone
Back to top
View user's profile Send private message
Conrad
TriniTuner 24-7


Joined: 15 Jun 2006
Tech posts: 1730
Location: Shifting into "D"
My 2NRide: Nissan A31 Cefiro

PostPosted: Thu Oct 29, 2009 11:53 am
   Post subject:
Reply with quote

An excerpt I have always kept at hand that may be applicable to what you guys are looking at.



The following excerpts are from Jay Kavanaugh, a turbocharger development engineer for Garrett Engine Boosting Systems, responding to a thread on Impreza.net, regarding exhaust design and exhaust theory:

“Howdy,

This thread was brought to my attention by a friend of mine in hopes of shedding some light on the issue of exhaust size selection for turbocharged vehicles. Most of the facts have been covered already. FWIW I'm an turbocharger development engineer for Garrett Engine Boosting Systems.

N/A cars: As most of you know, the design of turbo exhaust systems runs counter to exhaust design for n/a vehicles. N/A cars utilize exhaust velocity (not backpressure) in the collector to aid in scavenging other cylinders during the blowdown process. It just so happens that to get the appropriate velocity, you have to squeeze down the diameter of the discharge of the collector (aka the exhaust), which also induces backpressure. The backpressure is an undesirable byproduct of the desire to have a certain degree of exhaust velocity. Go too big, and you lose velocity and its associated beneficial scavenging effect. Too small and the backpressure skyrockets, more than offsetting any gain made by scavenging. There is a happy medium here.

For turbo cars, you throw all that out the window. You want the exhaust velocity to be high upstream of the turbine (i.e. in the header). You'll notice that primaries of turbo headers are smaller diameter than those of an n/a car of two-thirds the horsepower. The idea is to get the exhaust velocity up quickly, to get the turbo spooling as early as possible. Here, getting the boost up early is a much more effective way to torque than playing with tuned primary lengths and scavenging. The scavenging effects are small compared to what you'd get if you just got boost sooner instead. You have a turbo; you want boost. Just don't go so small on the header's primary diameter that you choke off the high end.

Downstream of the turbine (aka the turboback exhaust), you want the least backpressure possible. No ifs, ands, or buts. Stick a Hoover on the tailpipe if you can. The general rule of "larger is better" (to the point of diminishing returns) of turboback exhausts is valid. Here, the idea is to minimize the pressure downstream of the turbine in order to make the most effective use of the pressure that is being generated upstream of the turbine. Remember, a turbine operates via a pressure ratio. For a given turbine inlet pressure, you will get the highest pressure ratio across the turbine when you have the lowest possible discharge pressure. This means the turbine is able to do the most amount of work possible (i.e. drive the compressor and make boost) with the available inlet pressure.

Again, less pressure downstream of the turbine is goodness. This approach minimizes the time-to-boost (maximizes boost response) and will improve engine VE throughout the rev range.

As for 2.5" vs. 3.0", the "best" turboback exhaust depends on the amount of flow, or horsepower. At 250 hp, 2.5" is fine. Going to 3" at this power level won't get you much, if anything, other than a louder exhaust note. 300 hp and you're definitely suboptimal with 2.5". For 400-450 hp, even 3" is on the small side.”

As for the geometry of the exhaust at the turbine discharge, the most optimal configuration would be a gradual increase in diameter from the turbine's exducer to the desired exhaust diameter-- via a straight conical diffuser of 7-12° included angle (to minimize flow separation and skin friction losses) mounted right at the turbine discharge. Many turbochargers found in diesels have this diffuser section cast right into the turbine housing. A hyperbolic increase in diameter (like a trumpet snorkus) is theoretically ideal but I've never seen one in use (and doubt it would be measurably superior to a straight diffuser). The wastegate flow would be via a completely divorced (separated from the main turbine discharge flow) dumptube. Due the realities of packaging, cost, and emissions compliance this config is rarely possible on street cars. You will, however, see this type of layout on dedicated race vehicles.

A large "bellmouth" config which combines the turbine discharge and wastegate flow (without a divider between the two) is certainly better than the compromised stock routing, but not as effective as the above.

If an integrated exhaust (non-divorced wastegate flow) is required, keep the wastegate flow separate from the main turbine discharge flow for ~12-18" before reintroducing it. This will minimize the impact on turbine efficiency-- the introduction of the wastegate flow disrupts the flow field of the main turbine discharge flow.

Necking the exhaust down to a suboptimal diameter is never a good idea, but if it is necessary, doing it further downstream is better than doing it close to the turbine discharge since it will minimize the exhaust's contribution to backpressure. Better yet: don't neck down the exhaust at all.

Also, the temperature of the exhaust coming out of a cat is higher than the inlet temperature, due to the exothermic oxidation of unburned hydrocarbons in the cat. So the total heat loss (and density increase) of the gases as it travels down the exhaust is not as prominent as it seems.
Another thing to keep in mind is that cylinder scavenging takes place where the flows from separate cylinders merge (i.e. in the collector). There is no such thing as cylinder scavenging downstream of the turbine, and hence, no reason to desire high exhaust velocity here. You will only introduce unwanted backpressure.

Other things you can do (in addition to choosing an appropriate diameter) to minimize exhaust backpressure in a turboback exhaust are: avoid crush-bent tubes (use mandrel bends); avoid tight-radius turns (keep it as straight as possible); avoid step changes in diameter; avoid "cheated" radii (cuts that are non-perpendicular); use a high flow cat; use a straight-thru perforated core muffler... etc.”

Comparing the two bellmouth designs, I've never seen either one so I can only speculate. But based on your description, and assuming neither of them have a divider wall/tongue between the turbine discharge and wg dump, I'd venture that you'd be hard pressed to measure a difference between the two. The more gradual taper intuitively appears more desirable, but it's likely that it's beyond the point of diminishing returns. Either one sounds like it will improve the wastegate's discharge coefficient over the stock config, which will constitute the single biggest difference. This will allow more control over boost creep. Neither is as optimal as the divorced wastegate flow arrangement, however.

There's more to it, though-- if a larger bellmouth is excessively large right at the turbine discharge (a large step diameter increase), there will be an unrecoverable dump loss that will contribute to backpressure. This is why a gradual increase in diameter, like the conical diffuser mentioned earlier, is desirable at the turbine discharge.

As for primary lengths on turbo headers, it is advantageous to use equal-length primaries to time the arrival of the pulses at the turbine equally and to keep cylinder reversion balanced across all cylinders. This will improve boost response and the engine's VE. Equal-length is often difficult to achieve due to tight packaging, fabrication difficulty, and the desire to have runners of the shortest possible length.”

Here's a worked example (simplified) of how larger exhausts help turbo cars:

Say you have a turbo operating at a turbine pressure ratio (aka expansion ratio) of 1.8:1. You have a small turboback exhaust that contributes, say, 10 psig backpressure at the turbine discharge at redline. The total backpressure seen by the engine (upstream of the turbine) in this case is:

(14.5 +10)*1.8 = 44.1 psia = 29.6 psig total backpressure

o here, the turbine contributed 19.6 psig of backpressure to the total.

Now you slap on a proper low-backpressure, big turboback exhaust. Same turbo, same boost, etc. You measure 3 psig backpressure at the turbine discharge. In this case the engine sees just 17 psig total backpressure! And the turbine's contribution to the total backpressure is reduced to 14 psig (note: this is 5.6 psig lower than its contribution in the "small turboback" case).

So in the end, the engine saw a reduction in backpressure of 12.6 psig when you swapped turbobacks in this example. This reduction in backpressure is where all the engine's VE gains come from.

This is why larger exhausts make such big gains on nearly all stock turbo cars-- the turbine compounds the downstream backpressure via its expansion ratio. This is also why bigger turbos make more power at a given boost level-- they improve engine VE by operating at lower turbine expansion ratios for a given boost level.

As you can see, the backpressure penalty of running a too-small exhaust (like 2.5" for 350 hp) will vary depending on the match. At a given power level, a smaller turbo will generally be operating at a higher turbine pressure ratio and so will actually make the engine more sensitive to the backpressure downstream of the turbine than a larger turbine/turbo would."
Back to top
View user's profile Send private message MSN Messenger
legacy_specB
Sweet on this forum


Joined: 11 Mar 2009
Tech posts: 261
Location: South
My 2NRide: Subaru Legacy Spec. B

PostPosted: Thu Oct 29, 2009 12:30 pm
   Post subject:
Reply with quote

EXCELLENT INFO........Thanks alot Very Happy Very Happy Very Happy Very Happy Very Happy Very Happy
Back to top
View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail MSN Messenger
BZ
Riding on 13's


Joined: 10 Jul 2004
Tech posts: 14
Location: Arima
My 2NRide:

PostPosted: Fri Oct 30, 2009 12:24 pm
   Post subject:
Reply with quote

Now all questions and concerns have been addressed, thanks Conrad! Wink
Back to top
View user's profile Send private message
nemesis
Ricer


Joined: 09 Jun 2004
Tech posts: 24
Location: Colorado
My 2NRide:

PostPosted: Sun Nov 01, 2009 10:33 pm
   Post subject:
Reply with quote

So back to my original answer to every Legacy exhaust question. Zerosports downpipe and HKS Hi-Power Silent!
Back to top
View user's profile Send private message MSN Messenger
Display posts from previous:   
Post new topic   Reply to topic   printer-friendly view    trinituner.com Forum Index -> SUBARU All times are GMT - 4 Hours
Goto page Previous  1, 2, 3
Page 3 of 3

 
Jump to:  
You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot vote in polls in this forum


Powered by phpBB © 2001, 2002 phpBB Group
ScriptWiz.com phpbb HTML Archiver - Created by ScriptWiz.com and released by Skinz.org