Ok. I guarentee i will come off as retarded for the first few of my posts on this. just bare with me....
Lets talk about the Torque Factor related to Exhaust setups.
When you answer one of these questions, put the number in front of it so that others can easily reference the question in the future when we are done talking about chicken and sheep and DT bringing sexy back. lol
(ex: 1. Well the answer is...)
With smaller engines, to keep the torque up in the green range [good range], you use a smaller exhaust pipe. However, if you go too small, it caps off the torque gain and starts reducing the HP.
With larger engines, you can increase this pipe size because there is MORE exhaust going through these pipes. Therefore, the exhaust pressure is kept in the green.
1. Does the Compression Ratio of the cylinders have anything to do with the size of the pipe you should use to keep your optimum back pressure [for Torque reasons]?
2. On the 420A, would it benefit from 4 oval pipes coming off the head [they are horizontal ovals] and gradually twisting into four vertical ovals [ 0000 ] and THEN merge into one circular pipe, as opposed to the standard oval-to-circle tube that happens within 6 inches of the exhaust leaving the engine?
3. What exhaust factors contribute and are the main cause of High End Torque loss? [ex: going from 70-80mph and it takes awhile in 5th]
4. Would a decrease in High End Torque cause the transmission to have to reach a higher RPM in order to acheive interstate speeds. [On average, 80mph for a 5spd 420a is 3400 Rpm. Say Ivan and I were side by side. His tach reads 3400 while my tach reads 3900-4000 rpm.]
Now I probably don't have everything right or worded right, but anyone who knows any answer to these 4 questions will understand what I'm trying to get at.
I now release the floor for discussion on this.





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