The addition of a No. 2 tomato juice can on the end of the single exhaust pipe increases the amount of torque produced below 3200 rpm, leading us to believe that such a “collector” affects low-rpm torque more than high-rpm torque. And it does.
Decreasing the length of the single exhaust pipe does not change the rpm point at which peak torque is produced, but we do notice that there is less torque below 3200 and more above this rpm. Lengthening the pipe (still no change in i.d.) seems to increase below-3200-rpm torque at the sacrifice of torque above this point.
And then we decide that an experimental increase in exhaust pipe i.d. should show the same results. But it doesn’t. Increasing the i.d. of the pipe simply raised the rpm point at which peak torque was produced, and decreasing the i.d. lowered peak torque rpm. So we concluded that pipe dimensional changes affect the shape of an engine’s torque curve, much like you’d expect a seesaw to react. Pipe i.d. fixes the point at which peak torque is developed. This becomes the pivotal point for the seesaw. Changing the length of the pipe merely “rocks” the torque about this peak point—just like a seesaw. Maybe you’ll want to refer to the illustration showing these relationships. If nothing else, you’ll see what we saw.
Now for the real world. The engine is multi-cylinder, and the exhaust pipes must join in some fashion. For example, let’s say the design is a V8 and each bank of four cylinders must join into a common volume before passing into the remainder of the system. Stock production exhaust manifolds usually incorporate very short passages leading into a “log” or manifold that connects to a head pipe leading back to the muffler. At low rpm, such stock exhaust manifolds exhibit low flow velocities, resulting in some amount of blowdown inefficiency and lost volumetric efficiency. As engine rpm increases, there is a tendency to cause the intake-to-exhaust pressure ratio to favor higher exhaust backpressure. This also hinders efficient cylinder blowdown and reduces volumetric efficiency. And it would seem that just about anything that diminishes volumetric efficiency also whacks fuel economy and net torque production. And it probably isn’t too good.
One of the first steps away from stock exhaust manifolding is some sort of individual tube (or header) design.
Typical of this is the four-into-one (tubes into collector) system for which there is no regard for the engine’s firing order. Four tubes on one bank of cylinders (V8 engine) lead into a collector, and four tubes on the other bank lead into their respective collector. And if nothing else, this allows the passage of exhaust gas pulses into separate tubes without the attending disturbances of adjacent cylinders dumping into the same passageway. Experience has shown that the pressure excursions of a slug of exhaust gas are most efficient (beneficial to cylinder evacuation) if allowed to pass to the atmosphere as undisturbed as possible. But that’s ideal. Actually, dumping a cylinder’s exhaust tube into a collector “shows” the remaining three tubes some amount of pressure disturbance, regardless of how neat we’d like all this to be. But it’s a start.
The next approach is to tie header tubes to collectors on the basis of the engine’s firing order. For example, let’s say we’re looking at a firing order of 1-8-4-3-6-5-7-2. (Obviously not a V6 unless it’s overworked.) In this case, exhaust tubes for cylinders Nos. 1, 4, 6 and 7 would dump into one collector and the remaining Nos. 8, 3, 5 and 2 into another. Since 180° of crankshaft rotation would take place between each pipe in the same collector, this could be termed a set of 180° exhaust headers. Turn up the volume on the next Grand National NASCAR race you hear and it’ll sound like everybody’s running 6-cylinder engines. But they aren’t.
Other methods of tying cylinders together are used (or have been experimentally tested), including Tri-Y and 90° separation (see illustrations). The reasons and results from each of these various methods, including some variations in how pipes are joined in a collector, remain somewhat controversial and related to where a given engine is required to operate (in terms of rpm). But the fact remains that fresh air and fuel are what we are attempting to provide for an engine. Combustion residue can displace fresh air/fuel mixtures to the point that combustion heat (power) is reduced, causing a reduction in power and a foot that goes deeper into the throttle.
Mufflers are exactly that. But when you consider the rpm levels at which the engines of today are being operated (well under 4000 rpm), there is little chance that backpressure from a restrictive muffler will be much of a problem.
However, exhaust manifolding that is too small to provide adequate low-rpm flow rates can hurt blowdown efficiency. And then we’re right back to the air/fuel mixture dilution problem.
But once you’ve moved away from over-the-highway engine packages and are legitimately into the 5000-plus-rpm range, the rule of thumb seems to be “where would you like the engine to run in terms of rpm?” Exhaust pipe i.d. will fix the rpm. at which peak torque is produced, pipe length will “rock” the torque curve about peak (remember, longer pipe adds to low-rpm and subtracts from high-rpm torque, shorter pipe does just the opposite). Collectors are low-rpm torque boosters, and by joining collectors with a section of pipe, you’ll add even more torque to the lower rpm ranges. Tuning an exhaust system to the specific needs of a particular vehicle? What determines pipe and collector dimensions?

G. In a conventional 180-degree exhaust system (V8-type engine), cylinders are joined on the basis of 180 degrees of crankshaft rotation. H. One deviation from the 180-degree header design joins cylinders separated by only 90 degrees of crankshaft rotation. Based on the theory that more “idle” time in a given pipe increases exhaust system efficiency (delay the introduction of secondary pulses for as long as possible), this approach may only send your local tube bender to the chuckle bin. I. Tri-Y headers have long since been used on small-displacement, automatic-transmission Super Stock- or Stock-type engines. Low- and mid-rpm torque output is improved, often over that provided by 180-degree and conventional four-into-one header designs.
REVIEW QUESTIONS: True or False
1. Valve overlap periods are typically long for low-rpm engines and short for high-rpm engines.
2. Blowdown is a term applied to how fast a given exhaust system can overflow its muffler.
3. Exhaust gas residue in an engine’s cylinders can be compared to EGR in an exhaust emissions controlled engine.
4. If an exhaust valve is unseated too quickly (relative to pjston position), unwanted exhaust gas will pass back into the intake manifold.
5. If an intake valve opens before its corresponding exhaust valve has seated (at the end of the exhaust cycle), the time both valves are unseated is called the valve overlap period.
6. “Critical” exhaust gas flow velocities are found at all engine speeds other than the rpm at which peak torque is produced.
7. Resonant conditions in an exhaust system take place when backpressure is at its highest level.
8. Question No. 7 was unclear, so the answer to No. 8 is doubtful.
9. Increasing the i.d. of an exhaust system’s header pipe will cause an increase in the amount of torque produced above the engine’s torque peak.
10. Roughly one-third of the heat energy produced by an engine passes out into the exhaust system.
11. If you want to increase low-rpm torque output, you decrease the length of the exhaust system’s collector(s).
12. As engine rpm increases above the torque peak, the relationship between intake pressure and exhaust backpressure favors intake pressure.
13. A set of headers of the 180° design do not operate at maximum efficiency until the engine has stabilized at this temperature.
14. Volumetric efficiency is affected by the amount of combustion residue left in the cylinder following the blowdown period.
15. With any luck at all, the questions next month will be a little easier.