Close but no cigar 😉
The exhaust gasses leaving the cylinder are traveling faster than the speed of sound, creating sonic booms.
The exhaust gasses leaving the cylinder are traveling faster than the speed of sound, creating sonic booms.
Originally posted by: Roger
Close but no cigar 😉
The exhaust gasses leaving the cylinder are traveling faster than the speed of sound, creating sonic booms.
Originally posted by: Roger
Close but no cigar 😉
The exhaust gasses leaving the cylinder are traveling faster than the speed of sound, creating sonic booms.
Originally posted by: GSOYF
Since I have no one to buy a gift for this Christmas (i.e. girlfriend) I have decided to purchase a gift for myself during this giving time of year.
I have decided that cat-back exhuast for my car is the gift that keeps giving. I have a '99 Cobra and have pondered a couple of options that I am seeking advice on. Any help would be appretiated:
1) Flowmaster - I hear they have the best sound, and they are the cheapest. However, huge drawback is that they are not stainless steel, and they corrode rather quickly...that is bad.
2) Borla - Not very loud and menacing which is a downfall, but they are all stainless and have a high overall quality. Another con is that they seem to be the most expensive, or damn close.
3) Steeda - This I don't know all that much about. I know they are all stainless which is a must, and that the sound is loud and throaty. Can anyone provide any additional info for Steeda exhaust.
These are the choices that I have narrowed it down to. If anyone has additional options please enlighten me, or if you have experience with any of the aforementioned products please give me your thoughts. I am looking for the loudest possible selection for a cat-back system (I will be getting H or X pipe in a couple of months but not now), and considering I live in MA I think that anything not stainless is not an option.
Thanks for your help,
GSOFY
Originally posted by: Roger
Close but no cigar 😉
The exhaust gasses leaving the cylinder are traveling faster than the speed of sound, creating sonic booms.
Originally posted by: Roger
First off, they are not 😉
4 stroke = Pistons travels up and down it's bore 4 times for every power stroke.
2 stroke = Pistons travel up and down it's bore 2 times for every power stroke.
For a 4 stroke, the crankshaft rotates twice for evry power stroke.
For a two stroke, the crankshaft rotates once for every power stroke.(Twice the number of exhaust pulses)<---- Your answer 😉
Another good reason why they could be noisier, most two strokes are aircooled, aircooled engines are noisier because the cylinders are exposed directly to the atmoshere.
Water cooled engines have water jackets surrounding the cylinders effectively dampening the noise.
Originally posted by: FrustratedUser
Well, they are more noisy. Always.
Originally posted by: Roger
Gasoline does not explode inside the combustion chamber, it burns rapidly 😉
Originally posted by: Roger
🙂
Anyone care to answer the question "At what temperature does gasoline burn inside the combustion chamber" ?
COOL! You learn something new everyday 🙂Originally posted by: Roger
Close but no cigar 😉
The exhaust gasses leaving the cylinder are traveling faster than the speed of sound, creating sonic booms.
Originally posted by: Jmmsbnd007
COOL! You learn something new everyday 🙂Originally posted by: Roger
Close but no cigar 😉
The exhaust gasses leaving the cylinder are traveling faster than the speed of sound, creating sonic booms.
So... if you had subsonic exhaust, it would be very very super quiet? Does this sonic boom stuff apply to pretty much all engines including 2 strokes?