And while on the subject. Anyone ever read about of try running a cold air intake on one of these? Im doing it (A) to hide the intake system a little and fill in some of the open/empty space and (B) cause I havent seen anything on someone else doing it. I did say I was building a custom.
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Inline 4 Exhaust question
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Hammered
Originally posted by andrewpogany View Post
And while on the subject. Anyone ever read about of try running a cold air intake on one of these? Im doing it (A) to hide the intake system a little and fill in some of the open/empty space and (B) cause I havent seen anything on someone else doing it. I did say I was building a custom.
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Originally posted by andrewpogany View PostOk hammered. ... Do YOU have sophisticated flow/back-pressure testing eq in ur garage? Neither do we (at least most of us as far as I know/have read).
I've been there, I've seen it.
.sigpic
mine: 2000 Honda GoldWing GL1500SE and 1980 GS850G'K' "Junior"
hers: 1982 GS850GL - "Angel" and 1969 Suzuki T250 Scrambler
#1 son: 1986 Yamaha Venture Royale 1300 and 1982 GS650GL "Rat Bagger"
#2 son: 1980 GS1000G
Family Portrait
Siblings and Spouses
Mom's first ride
Want a copy of my valve adjust spreadsheet for your 2-valve per cylinder engine? Send me an e-mail request (not a PM)
(Click on my username in the upper-left corner for e-mail info.)
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Speedo
wow - talk about being summarily humbled. Genuflection 2 u.
btw, have you seen "World's Fastest Indian"? Seriously. Have you? See it, you'll get all teary eyed and thank me.
anyhoo, see my other posts that may (or not - if not, sorry) be of interest to u...
This forum contains old posts which may have information which may be useful. It is a closed forum in that you can not post here any longer. Please post your questions in the other technical forums.
May I very very humbley ask this question(?): having seen ur basic concept (looks great and really cool btw) which is a leather-british-Brooks saddle-bicycle seat type of thing with an upright riding position, what is the point of obsessing on exhaust flow characteristics etc? Your ride is an aerodynamic brick/dinosaur?
I mean, if I built the coolest looking but Barn-Door-ish hotrod (and there are a LOT of 'em out there), even if I have CFM flow bench (for intakes and the like), and whatever the thehelll they use to flow test exhaust pipes, my "brick" ride (much like a bike) would not be able to take advantage beyond apx maybe 50-60mph.
I guess I'm just asking since I've wasted...err, I mean "invested" SO much $$ in various hotrod projects over the past 25 years.
Ok, fine, assuming you are a hotrodAtheist and won't listen to reason (I never did...well, now i do...):
- so you want "real" flow numbers in CFM off of an official "flow bench" as far as head (combustion chamber), intake, exhaust, etc. Well, may I suggest contacting Vance and Hines or Yoshimura? Their records speak for themselves. These guys know (or used to know).
We average pukes in this forum (again, if I'm off, surprise me y'all...) just want our rides to work, work good/right, and work good/right for the long haul (i.e. not break every other week like drag-racer stuff). Ok and maybe have the rest of us be impressed with your work/ride. Getting something old to look good AND work good is hard. VERY hard and very time consuming. The bikers/rodders who spend all the time and energy to do this deserve a lot of credit.
Rant over.
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For what you want - a cruiser type power - the system you suggest will work reasonably well IMO.
The CV carbs are quite sensitive to pipe changes yes, but there's a lot of info here which may help.
Your twin tail pipes & mufflers will act as a pressure bleed resistor which can be tuned - washers with different size holes would be easy.
There will not be any exhaust scavenge/crossover problems unless you're planning on running an ungodly long duration set of cams - a six is the only setup which has problems with a collector this close to the ports.
Be careful with your cold air setup - try not to pressurise the airbox as this will cause more problems than the exhaust.
Greg T
And I met Burt Munro a couple of times - he wouldn't have gone on line to ask, he'd have just tried it !Last edited by GregT; 10-06-2009, 12:49 AM.
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reddirtrider
Originally posted by andrewpogany View Postps As far as header / exhaust coating. Do not do yourself. Don't D*ck around and send it off to JetHot (or EQ). They have all the powder coat paint booths and ovens and will do it right. My Gs750 JetHot coated Yosh headers have lasted 20 years and counting. No rust. No problems. My Ford 460 truck headers got Jet Coating (silver as opposed to black on Suzi) 5 yrs ago as well....look perfect and brand new. Just an opinion from someone who has spent a buttload of money on various hotrod stuff (and a ton of my own time too) over the yrs and knows what's what and what's worth it....
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Hammered
The reason Im putting as much time into the exhaust design is I plan to ride the hell out of this thing. And ex rodder or not, gas aitn as cheap as it used to be. I live in SC but go home to Northern VA every chance I get and if I can squeze I few extra mile per gallon, then i say why not. Its not as if I plan to finish this build any time soon. As I progress, the concept evolves a little here and there. At one time, I had planned on cutting down the shocks to lower it, but since then, Ive designed a mount to run 2 3" dia air bags. Nothing about this bike will be stock when Im done (whenever that may end up being) So I figure why not step it up every place I can.
As far as Techlines coating,Ill be using Colorgard. Its an air dry coating that cures at about 200 and bakes on harder with the exhaust. A HVLP gun like suggested will do the job great.
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Originally posted by Hammered View PostYou still in Florence or did you finally get to go home?
Got home for a week near the middle, but was down there for 10 weeks, total.
.sigpic
mine: 2000 Honda GoldWing GL1500SE and 1980 GS850G'K' "Junior"
hers: 1982 GS850GL - "Angel" and 1969 Suzuki T250 Scrambler
#1 son: 1986 Yamaha Venture Royale 1300 and 1982 GS650GL "Rat Bagger"
#2 son: 1980 GS1000G
Family Portrait
Siblings and Spouses
Mom's first ride
Want a copy of my valve adjust spreadsheet for your 2-valve per cylinder engine? Send me an e-mail request (not a PM)
(Click on my username in the upper-left corner for e-mail info.)
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TheCafeKid
Originally posted by Hammered View PostThe reason Im putting as much time into the exhaust design is I plan to ride the hell out of this thing. And ex rodder or not, gas aitn as cheap as it used to be. I live in SC but go home to Northern VA every chance I get and if I can squeze I few extra mile per gallon, then i say why not. Its not as if I plan to finish this build any time soon. As I progress, the concept evolves a little here and there. At one time, I had planned on cutting down the shocks to lower it, but since then, Ive designed a mount to run 2 3" dia air bags. Nothing about this bike will be stock when Im done (whenever that may end up being) So I figure why not step it up every place I can.
As far as Techlines coating,Ill be using Colorgard. Its an air dry coating that cures at about 200 and bakes on harder with the exhaust. A HVLP gun like suggested will do the job great.
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Hammered
Originally posted by TheCafeKid View PostHow do you figure changing the exhaust will allow you to GAIN HP?? Everything done through the years for performance, or looks, has shown quite the opposite. Sure, you're dumping 40 lbs of weight, but in order to get the bike jetted right, you're expending more fuel. Seems quite contridictory to your idea..
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TheCafeKid
Originally posted by Hammered View PostI never said I was increasing the HP by doing anything to the exhaust design. But if the design is good and I get a good coating with the Techline, I should see some gain in power. Plus with a change in the gearing, I should see a gain. And as you noted, the weight loss will add tot he MPG even if its a small amount.
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Speedo
lovin to see all these posts from you OH guys (being one myself...Cleve/Dayton/Columbus/Mansfield/Lancaster). warms the heart.
Now, to bidness...
Reddirtrider,
You said
I'd have to disagree with you on the coating. It's no more difficult than painting your bike, which is 90% prep Really? I've been a painter (in a past life). How are you painting the INSIDE of that header? Just curious...maybe I'll learn something...
Also, I have to agree with CafeKid in that more power means more fuel (in general)....unless you have some ridiculously awesome plan for max power (and fuel) at full throttle and lean/miserly thing going on at part-throttle and most other driving conditions (Chebby Corvette has done it right/very well in this regard over the yrs).
Do tell...
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Hammered
My plan for attempting to squeeze all the MPH out of the build I can will come from a change in gearing. I dont need to launch like a bat out of hell on this. If I can drop the overall RPM, I should make up for any, if any jetting over the stock size. I am building an airbox type intake. Now as far as coating the inside of the header with Colorgard. Ive spoken with a REP and Im told that if need be, I could use a ball brush to coat the inside. Im not sure Ill need to coat the inside of the header. Colorgard really doenst need much in the way of prep other than for appearance sake so, a little time with a flap wheel, wire wheel and bastard file should give me all the exterior prep I need.
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