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Exceptions to the Rules!

The tuning rules we mentioned previously work most of the time for your typical old fashioned box collector header and Tri-Y header.  However current state of the art header designs break these rules to produce amazing results with dimensions that are very different from conventional wisdom.  State of the art headers have features such as merged collectors, collector venturis, megaphones and reverse cones.

Burns collector on a Nissan Sentra SE-R
A Burns collector is shown here while being fabricated into a header.  You can see the merge, venturi and megaphone sections of the the collector

A lot of the work on the new generation of headers is credited to the genius of Jack Burns.  His beautiful merged collectors have revolutionized header design.  Best of all, when you purchase a Burns collector, you can have your designed optimized by Jack himself through his X-Design software and phone consultation for free.  A merged collector has a streamlined mitered merge instead of a simple box.  The merged collector signifies the acoustic end of the tube but maintains a high velocity in this area for an even stronger rarefaction pulse.  It's smooth tapers also give a pulse over a wider RPM range over the abrupt primary termination of the traditional box collector.

This HondaK20 header by Hi-Tech features anti-reversion chambers, stepped primaries, tri y collector
This Honda K20A header by Hy-Tech features anti-reversion chambers, stepped primaries and a merged Tri-Y collector.  You can see the nice merged construction of the collector in this picture

A feature in the Burns collector is a venturi or a area of reduced diameter with a converging taper and a diverging exit.  The venturi is found just after the merge.  The venturi uses Bernoulli's principal to increase the exhaust gas velocity creating a stronger scavenging pulse.  For the tuning freak Burns has a collector with a tunable venturi so the collector can be optimized for the engine on a dyno. 

Burns B-TEC collector removeable venturi
Burns B-TEC collector has a tuneable venturi so the engines powerband can be fine tuned on a dyno or the track

Other features found on a Burns designed headers are megaphones, which also help amplify and strengthen the scavenging pulse and reverse cones which create another point of wave reflection which usually helps improve after peak power, flattening the power curve instead of letting it fall abruptly.

ASP Mike Kojima replica SR20DE header
This ASP header mounted on an SR20DE features primaries that step up from 1.75 to 1.875 at 13" down a 26" long primary tube

Stepped primaries are where the primary tube steps up in diameter in equal segments along the length of the primary tube.  The steps are usually in 1/8 inch increments.  Usually a step is found 1/2 of the way down the primary but for engines with a real high rev range, a triple step is sometimes used, the primary may step from 1.75" at the head to 1.875 and finally 2.00 inches by the collector in even intervals.  Stepped primaries both serve as anti reversion devices and stay in tune longer.

Headers using some, any or all of these features usually have dimensions and power characteristics quite different from conventional wisdom.  A Burns designed header will usually have a shorter primary tube of a larger diameter that has more low end power, a wider powerband and more top end than a composite of a Tri-Y and a conventional 4-1, especially on highly tuned engines with big cams.

Nismo QR25DE B15 Sentra SE-R header
Hotshot Gen 6 SR20DE header for SE-R
The Nismo header for the SE-R Spec-V Sentra and the Hotshot Gen 6 header for the SE-R powered by the SR20DE engine are examples of Tri-Y collector headers.  The Gen 6 header also features stepped primaries

The Tri-Y collector header design is another exception to conventional wisdom, this header has long primary tubes like a 4-1 but with a Tri-Y merge in the collector section.  This sort of header typically has good peak power and a wide powerband.  This is because having the interference branch merge in the collector makes for a longer higher volume interference branch and the longer primaries act like a 4-1.

Honda B18C anti reversion header
This custom Honda B18C header by Hy-Tech has anti reversion chambers which are the bumps located about 6 inches down the primary tubes

Another design exception is the Anti-Reversion header. Whether Anti-Reversion headers work or not is a controversial subject. Some engine builders say that highly tuned race engines with big overlap camshafts prefer anti-reversion headers.  These have a chambered primary tube.  In other words, the primary tube increases in diameter by about a quarter of an inch, a few inches from the head flange for about 2".  The chamber is believed to prevent reversion of the exhaust gases during the overlap period by trapping the reversion back pulse that can contaminate the cylinder with exhaust gas, creating a wider powerband and more torque.  

 

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Posted in: Magazine, Tech, Engine

Comments

Seagondollar
# Seagondollar
Friday, October 30, 2009 1:12 PM
I have a 90 degree V Twin motorcycle and have pondered for some time if in designing a 2 into 1 system that one primary tube shouldn't be longer than the other to get the returning wave to the other cylinder at the right time.

Any thoughts? Any good reading that you'd recommend? (SAE & the like)
jere
# jere
Sunday, January 17, 2010 3:16 PM
Good article!

I am trying to picture what the inside of the anti reversion chamber looks like. Does the pipe from the engine, protrude into the flair of the bubble, or is it cut off where the bubble starts to flair?

Also would making a larger bubble in the pipe be beneficial? Doing something like the exhaust before the muffler on the Project Aprilia. Making all of the primaries in the collector balloon up? ( with lack of a better wording)
mikemiessler
# mikemiessler
Monday, February 08, 2010 2:57 PM
Headers aren't just function, they're art as well. A well designed headers will look rather good underneath your hood. Holding true to that belief, those square tube headers just dont cut it. They just look cheap.
Slartibartfast
# Slartibartfast
Tuesday, May 11, 2010 2:01 PM
Seagondollar: Probably a worthwhile endeavor. Have fun with the math.

Jere: Sometimes being old has it's advantages. I was reading hot-rodding rags in the Eighties when the first AR pipes were being offered for the street. They generally have a short length of pipe protruding from the head around which the outer pipe was flared to create a conical chamber. The flare necked down to the primary pipe from where the rest of header looked normal. I get the impression the AR was primarily about mass reversion and not tuning the reflected pulses traveling back up the pipe. It was mentioned to me by someone who knew a bit about designing and tuning for acoustics that ANY discontinuity creates a reflected pulse, including the end of the tail pipe.

circuitsports
# circuitsports
Thursday, April 07, 2011 4:20 PM
the square tubing headers are fail how can airflow remain laminar with 4 90 degree right angles - bac in the 80's maybe for clearance issues but now you'd use oval piping where you had to certainly not on the manifold.

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