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Selecting Headers

A well designed header can produce gains of 3-20 wheel horsepower, more on engines with aftermarket cams, supercharging or nitrous oxide injection.  In addition to increased horsepower, headers can result in better gas mileage since headers improve pumping efficiency and scavenging. 

A good general rule of thumb is that shorter and bigger diameter primary runners are better for top end power. Camshaft design is also a huge factor in header design.  The later the closing point of the exhaust valve and the longer the cams duration, the shorter the header primary pipes must be.  Longer and/or smaller diameter runners are better for lower rpm and stock cams. Again generally, the best header design for a naturally aspirated street car is a Tri-Y or 4 into 1 with long runners and/or small runner diameters, and a merged collector.  Look for a header manufactured with thick wall, 14-16 gage steel tubing.  Rust and heat-resistant ceramic-coated or stainless steel pipes will be more durable and longer lasting.  Thick flanges will decrease the chance of exhaust leaks and last longer. 
 

Headers and Emissions Controls


On post 1995 fuel injected engines, the ECU must receive a pre and post catalytic converter exhaust stream from the front and rear O2 sensors to avoid an SES “check engine” light.   Removing the pre-cat or installing a cat-less aftermarket header causes the O2 sensors to read the same exhaust constitution and throw an error code.  There are three ways to prevent a code from coming up.  If you’ve only removed the pre-cat, weld a new bung behind the main cat and relocate the rear O2 sensor there.  You can also use a rear O2 sensor simulator in line with the rear O2 sensor to fool the ECU into thinking the O2 sensor is actually sending the same signal as it would behind a cat, eliminating the “check engine” light.  Finally, you can try using an anti-fouler plug adapter that locates the second O2 sensor away from the exhaust stream, although this often doesn’t work.

Hotshot KA24DE header
This Nissan KA24DE header has provisions for O2 sensors and the EGR valve as well as Tri-Y construction and stepped primaries

If you plan on passing an inspection, look for a header that will allow you to retain the stock emissions equipment.  O2 sensors, EGR valves and other emissions controls do not rob wide-open throttle horsepower.  Doing so won’t increase power and will only contribute to pollution.  OBDII cars (1995+) will also throw an engine code if any of the emissions controls are not connected.  These codes alone could keep you from registering your car or passing an emissions test in many states.  However, if your header does not have a provision for the EGR, a disconnected EGR system will suck air and could create a lean air/fuel ratio at part throttle.  To prevent this, you can disable the EGR system by disconnecting the vacuum line at the top of the EGR valve and plugging it, although you will probably want to swap back in the stock header for an inspection. 

Most headers include provisions for the O2 sensor.  However, a CARB EO number is the only thing many states will use to consider your header street legal even if you aren’t emitting excessive pollutants from your tailpipe.  If you want to drive on the street without worrying about getting hassled by law enforcement or having problem registering or inspecting your car, invest in a header with a CARB number. 

square primary headers
We spotted these square tubed headers at the PRI show.  Do they work?  The owner of the company was pretty enthusiastic.  We don't know...

Sources

Burns Stainless

ASP

DC Sports

Pages: 3 of 3 Previous Page
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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