Tuned exhaust

Ferrari V10 engine showing one of its two tuned extractor manifolds

A tuned exhaust system is an exhaust system for an internal combustion engine which improves its efficiency by using precise geometry to reflect the pressure waves from the exhaust valve or port back to the valve or port at a particular time in the cycle.

Tuned exhaust systems are common on motor racing engines, light aircraft engines,[1] model engines and two-stroke motorcycle engines, and are not restricted to these applications. They are of two main types:

In either case, the efficiency of the system is greatest at a particular engine speed, which is determined by the exhaust system geometry. Tuning the system for best effect is typically done both by calculation during the design of the exhaust system, and by trial and error during engine development.

An important recent development is variable geometry exhaust systems, both for two-stroke and four-stroke engines, which allow the tuning to be effective over a wider range of engine speeds.

Two-stroke engines

Main article: expansion chamber
Yasuni aftermarket motor scooter exhaust system. The exhaust passes first through the expansion chamber at the bottom and then exits through the muffler above it.
A conceptual animation of a two-stroke engine with a tuned exhaust system using an expansion chamber. Exhaust gases are in grey, fuel/air mixture is green. In practice the fuel/air mix is unlikely to progress as far down the exhaust pipe as shown.

In many two-stroke engines, the exhaust port is opened and closed directly by the position of the piston rather than by a separate valve, which restricts the timing of its operation; Typically, the port remains open long after is optimum, allowing some of the incoming charge to escape. This can be partly addressed by use of a tuned exhaust system to deliver a pulse of positive pressure prior to the port closing, to retain the charge.

Alternatives

Direct-injection two-stroke diesel engines tend to use exhaust valves actuated either by camshafts or electronic control, rather than exhaust ports. This system is called uniflow scavenging. Opposed piston engines are inherently uniflow-scavenged, but these do use piston-controlled cylinder ports. Two-stroke opposed piston engines such as the Napier Deltic and Junkers Jumo 204 engines use one piston to control the inlet port and the other the exhaust, allowing more flexibility in timing. A variation of this approach is taken by the split-single engine, in which two cylinders share one combustion chamber, with the piston in one cylinder controlling the transfer port and the other the exhaust port.

Four-stroke engines

Aftermarket extractor manifold
Rotax 912s aero engine showing the tuned exhaust system
Collector on a racing car
Zoomie headers on a dragster

Extractor manifolds

Most non-turbo performance cars and high-performance four-stroke motorcycles use extractor manifolds (headers in American English), as do most non-turbo racing cars. Extractor manifolds are also available as aftermarket accessories to suit many engines.

Extractor manifolds offer the following advantages over the simple manifolds often fitted to non-performance engines:

This type of exhaust system can be used with or without a muffler, and so can be used on both race and road vehicles.

Zoomie header

A less common tuned exhaust type is the zoomie header, which consists of a simple tuned pipe, one per cylinder.[4][5][6] The shock wave is reflected at the open end of the pipe, so no muffler can be fitted. Zoomie headers are used in drag racing, hydroplane racing, truck pulling and similar competitions.[6] They were also used on many aircraft engines, particularly those built for fighter aircraft in the heyday of piston engined aircraft.

Variable geometry

There have been a number of attempts to broaden the speed range at which a tuned exhaust is effective by use of variable geometry.

Two-stroke

A variable tuned exhaust system has been used on several motorcycles, including models by Honda, Kawasaki and Suzuki, often in combination with a variable timing exhaust port. Control is either mechanical, operated either automatically according to the engine speed or manually by the rider, or electronic, allowing more precise automatic control.

Four-stroke

Variable geometry exhaust systems have been used on some four-stroke motorcycles, such as the 1987 Yamaha FZR1000, and also on some cars.

Other tuned exhaust technologies

Pressure wave superchargers, also known as wave rotors, such as the Comprex and Hyprex units, use a synchronised supercharger to utilise the exhaust pulse energy. Ferrari experimented with a wave rotor for Formula One but it never raced, Mazda produced a diesel powered 626 equipped with a wave rotor in 1988, and in 1996 the SmILE concept car incorporated one.

See also

Two-stroke systems

Four-stroke systems

External links

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, July 23, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.