Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

i have a screamer pipe on an external gate on my car. yes it is very loud, and yeah i guess it sounds like a jet. i hope its not 10k fine cause that would be very bad. if cops are around its not a problem because external gates come on big turbos so they open up late. mine opens at around 4500 revs so its quite easy to drive without it openning if you want. and yes you can pipe them up, they pretty much go straight back into the exhaust just before the cat.

Hi guys, on a turbo car, the rapid rotation of the turbine "cuts" up the noise waves. So if you run an open exhaust (no mufflers) the noise from the turbine it is not as loud as that from wastegate. There is no cutting, so the noise is substantially louder (more than 10 db) from the wastegate.

I have never seen any significant horsepower loss from plumbing the wastegate back into the exhaust, if it is done properly.

So it's just noise for noise sake, no performance gain.

Originally posted by Sydneykid

I have never seen any significant horsepower loss from plumbing the wastegate back into the exhaust, if it is done properly.

define "properly"

i am planning on piping up the gate when my car is rego'd. the screamer pipe has a flange on it and my front pipe has has a flange that has been covered just in front of the cat. i assumed that all it needed was a pipe going from one to the other.

Hi aybee, "properly" means;

**Joins the main exhaust more than 300 mm from the turbine

**Has allowance for differential expansion (slip joint or flex pipe). Otherwise it will crack due to the different expansion rates, the main pipe expands as soon as hot exhaust, via the turbine, hits. The wastegate pipe doesn't get hot until the wastegate opens. Result = constantly cracking joints. You can help this by wrapping both pipes together with exhaust wrap.

**Has good flowing joints, not a right angle, as I have seen more often than I would have thought possible.

**Is of the appropriate inside diameter.

**The pipe from the joint onwards is of sufficient inside diameter.

Basically standard good sense that any decent exhaust shop should know.

Hope that helps

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


×
×
  • Create New...