Now Available
Check out our new Online Store.



C2Motorsports
2110 Reynolds Lane, Unit 4
Louisville, KY 40218
502-895-3660
|
|
Learn About ...
How Exhaust Headers Work
Headers are one of the easiest bolt-on accessories you
can use to improve an engine's performance. The goal of headers
is to make it easier for the engine to push exhaust gases out
of the cylinders.
When you look at the four-stroke cycle, you can see that the
engine produces all of its power during the power stroke. The
gasoline in the cylinder burns and expands during this stroke,
generating power. The other three strokes are necessary evils
required to make the power stroke possible. If these three strokes
consume power, they are a drain on the engine.
During the exhaust stroke, a good way for an engine to lose power
is through back pressure. The exhaust valve opens at the beginning
of the exhaust stroke, and then the piston pushes the exhaust
gases out of the cylinder. If there is any amount of resistance
that the piston has to push against to force the exhaust gases
out, power is wasted. Using two exhaust valves rather than one
improves the flow by making the hole that the exhaust gases travel
through larger.
In a normal engine, once the exhaust gases exit the cylinder
they end up in the exhaust manifold. In a four-cylinder or eight-cylinder
engine, there are four cylinders using the same manifold. From
the manifold, the exhaust gases flow into one pipe toward the
catalytic converter and the muffler. It turns out that the manifold
can be an important source of back pressure because exhaust gases
from one cylinder build up pressure in the manifold that affects
the next cylinder that uses the manifold.
The idea behind an exhaust header is to eliminate the manifold's
back pressure. Instead of a common manifold that all of the
cylinders share, each cylinder gets its own exhaust pipe. These
pipes come together in a larger pipe called the collector. The
individual pipes are cut and bent so that each one is the same
length as the others. By making them the same length, it guarantees
that each cylinder's exhaust gases arrive in the collector spaced
out equally so there is no back pressure generated by the cylinders
sharing the collector.
Information from HowStuffWorks.com
|
|
|