Catalytic convertors exist for a reason. You might be making little CO and NOx under certain conditions but not all. Pollution its a lot more important than amount of fuel burned. There is a reason a scooter pollutes 10x as much as a car... no cats
Doing it right would be before the cat not after.
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So the 'right' way dumps fumes out where you can inhale them and you can get all that fun nitric and sulfuric acid all over the underside of your car? Suuure.
So the 'right' way dumps fumes out where you can inhale them and you can get all that fun nitric and sulfuric acid all over the underside of your car? Suuure.
But overall, the more fuel burned the more "pollution" produced regardless.
No. A cat reduces mpg slightly but reduces pollution by orders orders of magnitude
2. You do it far enough back (right before the muffler) that you still have enough backpressure from the rest of the piping.
I see a flange there, and no cutoff valve. I would think that would be piped further downstream, so fumes shouldn't be an issue.
Not when you are driving. Maybe when you are sitting which you shouldn't be for long periods anyway.
And cats or not, all things being equal, a car with cats that burns more fuel still produces more pollution than a car with cats that burns less fuel.
Depends on the model of car, but it's the general blanket statements thrown about that make me laugh at threads like this.Do you know where the cabin air inlet is? Or any firewall vents? I can smell exhaust, coolant, and PCV/oil vapor leaks in my Miata through the firewall vents and hvac system, it's worse with the hardtop on and windows up.
Yes and modding a car in such a way that it burns 5% more fuel is much better than modding it in such a way that it produces 20x as much air pollution.
But many power adding mods increase gas mileage. For example a 93 octane tune on a 4.6L Mustang improves gas mileage because less energy is wasted by having the retarded spark timing required for 87 octane. Same goes for things that decrease restriction like exhaust and intake mods.
Depends on the model of car, but it's the general blanket statements thrown about that make me laugh at threads like this.
Ok, you win. From now on, all I need are cats and I can put absolutely any mod on a car without harming the environment. Thanks!
You're making me want to go get my emissions test done sans cat just so I can show you how far off your numbers are.Yes and modding a car in such a way that it burns 5% more fuel is much better than modding it in such a way that it produces 20x as much air pollution.
No I do understand the difference, I just don't agree with your random numbers and lack of evidence. Nor do I really care to discuss it anymore because you will always be right in your own mind so there is no point. Let me ask you this though, you are telling me that a 2000HP car with a cat will produce less pollution than a 200HP car without one?Wow, so you really don't understand the difference between burning slightly more fuel or even slightly less, and releasing 10x as much pollutants that directly cause health problems and smog?
You're like the idiots promoting scooters at the Earth Day festival in Dallas. I told him my ULEV Mustang pollutes far less
You're making me want to go get my emissions test done sans cat just so I can show you how far off your numbers are.
So the 'right' way dumps fumes out where you can inhale them and you can get all that fun nitric and sulfuric acid all over the underside of your car? Suuure.
No I do understand the difference, I just don't agree with your random numbers and lack of evidence. Nor do I really care to discuss it anymore because you will always be right in your own mind so there is no point. Let me ask you this though, you are telling me that a 2000HP car with a cat will produce less pollution than a 200HP car without one?
THIS ^
They put my Camaro on the OBDII test and it passed with flying colors NO CAT. They didn't believe it should have so they put it on the sniffer and it passed. I guess it doesn't matter since it pollutes 20x more without a cat regardless.....
My old Festiva passed the sniffer test without a cat as well. It had a carburetor but it ran like a top, though, there is no way since it polluted 20x more without a cat on it. :rollseyes:
Depends on the model of car, but it's the general blanket statements thrown about that make me laugh at threads like this.
Oh so cats exist for no reason? They do nothing? It's all just a big conspiracy right? Cities were not more polluted back before the regulations started requiring them? The MAN is lying when HE tells you that a lawnmower pollutes 20x as much as a car?
Or could it be that the careful tuning to achieve such low emissions of the gases they test for in your locality, under a very particular set of circumstances, is irrelevant in the real world?
I'm not sure if this has occurred to you, but a 2000hp engine and a 200hp engine are both producing about the same 30hp to keep a car rolling along at cruise speed. So they are burning about the same amount of fuel, aside from differences in efficiency.
Reactions are catalyzed. I don't think it's proper to say a substance has been 'catalyzed.' It has been converted to another substance by a chemical reaction.
That bit of nit-picking aside, I don't think harmful gases like CO are at a high enough level in modern cars to make an under-car exhaust leak a serious concern.
You would probably need a combination of poor running condition and a way for exhaust to enter the cabin (unsealed hole around a manual shifter seems like a common one)...the kinds of things that kids that would do a 'washer mod' probably have, actually...
If you want your exhaust to be louder, get a muffler that...muffles less. Or replace one or more mufflers with a piece of pipe. It's not that hard/expensive. I still might hate you for it, but I'd wouldn't laugh at you quite so much. Spacing pipe connections apart with washers might as well be drilling random 'speed holes' in your exhaust.
And cats or not, all things being equal, a car with cats that burns more fuel still produces more pollution than a car with cats that burns less fuel.
Incorrect.
Most motorcycles use less fuel than most cars and have no cats. Yet, in California, they make up 1% of miles driven and 10% of the smog.