zevenenergie
Serious Thumper
   
Offline

SuzukiSavage.com Rocks!
Posts: 1908
The Netherlands Den Haag
|
What I'm trying to convey is that there's more to exhaust design than simply removing burnt gases from the combustion chamber.
Because the intake and exhaust valves are briefly open at the same time, a phenomenon known as valve overlap, the exhaust flow can create a vacuum effect (or scavenging), which helps pull more fresh air-fuel mixture into the cylinder. This significantly enhances volumetric efficiency, especially at higher RPMs.
Beyond camshaft timing, the exhaust system plays a crucial role in this process. It's largely a game of pressure wave dynamics: the length, diameter, and shape of the exhaust pipes determine how these waves behave. Specifically, the primary pipe length (often called the pitch length) must be tuned to reflect pressure waves back toward the cylinder at just the right moment, ideally during the valve overlap period.
In a Vulcan S 650, which is a parallel-twin engine, both cylinders share a common exhaust system. This means the exhaust pulses from each cylinder can interact and influence each other, creating complex pressure wave patterns. As a result, the optimal pipe thickness and length can't be calculated the same way as for a single-cylinder engine. The presence of the second cylinder changes the timing and amplitude of pressure waves, which must be considered in the exhaust design.
David’s exhaust concept is a clever solution, managing to reduce noise while retaining some of the performance benefits of open pipes. It’s simple yet ingenious. But it only works effectively if it's integrated into a system where valve timing and pressure wave behavior are properly calculated and understood.
The process should go like this:
Understand the physics, how valve overlap, exhaust pulse timing, and wave reflections influence scavenging and backpressure.
Define your goals, more torque at low RPM? Better top-end power?
Calculate the system, tune pipe lengths, diameters, and merge points based on pressure wave timing and engine RPM targets.
Then, and only then, do you move on to adjusting the engine management system (ECU) to take full advantage of the physical setup, fuel mapping, ignition timing.
Without that foundation of understanding, even the most nicely made exhaust won’t perform as intended.
It seems like you are thinking: applying david's idea is the same as mounting open pipes but with less noise, so just the right thickness of pipe, and you are done. But it is not that simple.
And even if you start working with software you have to enter somewere that you use David's principle and how do you do that? Enter that you use open pipe,s?David's idea must also be calculated to function optimally.
Tuning engines seems simple but it is complex. If you mistake a wrongly designed 2-stroke exhaust for a David Visar version for a 4-stroke, then I would just imitate someone else's setup. And everyone will praise you for your wisdom.
|