Porting and Polishing Experience
#71
#72
The flip side is that these are cheap and common bolt on parts that can be added simply with the motor still in these Disco 2s... which means that you can grab some $40 exhaust headers from your local pullapart junkyard, port them and tunnel into/through their pathways, and try different combinations at any time to see what gives your motor the most pulling power.
Oh no, you screwed up a $40 part. No one's gonna cry.
So, you get your motor rebuilt and installed and you drive around to test your setup, then you experiment with $40 junkyard headers that you've hollowed out in various ways later.
You can always go back to your stock headers. No real downside and not any real $ at risk.
Plus, exhaust headers don't have to impact your rebuild and reinstall schedule so they don't keep your Disco off of the road longer waiting on exotic parts to arrive, etc.
You just add them later after your Disco 2 is back on the road.
#73
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CollieRover (04-30-2018)
#74
#75
The following users liked this post:
CollieRover (04-30-2018)
#76
#78
True. The cost to develop is significant, poor bastids.
The flip side is that these are cheap and common bolt on parts that can be added simply with the motor still in these Disco 2s... which means that you can grab some $40 exhaust headers from your local pullapart junkyard, port them and tunnel into/through their pathways, and try different combinations at any time to see what gives your motor the most pulling power.
Oh no, you screwed up a $40 part. No one's gonna cry.
So, you get your motor rebuilt and installed and you drive around to test your setup, then you experiment with $40 junkyard headers that you've hollowed out in various ways later.
You can always go back to your stock headers. No real downside and not any real $ at risk.
Plus, exhaust headers don't have to impact your rebuild and reinstall schedule so they don't keep your Disco off of the road longer waiting on exotic parts to arrive, etc.
You just add them later after your Disco 2 is back on the road.
The flip side is that these are cheap and common bolt on parts that can be added simply with the motor still in these Disco 2s... which means that you can grab some $40 exhaust headers from your local pullapart junkyard, port them and tunnel into/through their pathways, and try different combinations at any time to see what gives your motor the most pulling power.
Oh no, you screwed up a $40 part. No one's gonna cry.
So, you get your motor rebuilt and installed and you drive around to test your setup, then you experiment with $40 junkyard headers that you've hollowed out in various ways later.
You can always go back to your stock headers. No real downside and not any real $ at risk.
Plus, exhaust headers don't have to impact your rebuild and reinstall schedule so they don't keep your Disco off of the road longer waiting on exotic parts to arrive, etc.
You just add them later after your Disco 2 is back on the road.
You could grind on stock manifolds, and increase their flow, but it will not be nearly as big of an improvement as quality headers.
The real benefit of headers is having 4 tubes that are different lengths, and designed so that as one cylinder's exhaust gas comes through it's tube, and gets to the collector(where the 4 tubes meet), that the next cylinder's escaping exhaust gas, as well as the next 2, all get to the collector at the correct time.
So that one exhaust pulse pushes the next out, and the flow is smooth and consistant, no bottle necking that causes excess back pressure.
That's why good headers are actually "tuned" for a specific engine. Like most things, timing is everything.
#79
Here you go. I can't get any real info on them.
https://www.ebay.com/itm/Stainless-S...53.m1438.l2649
I am going to source some good manifolds that have all the stud holes intact so I can get a good install, then port match them.
in the future, when I learn how to weld I will take on headers, high flow Cats etc.
At least I can get the exhaust not to hit a 2mm lip directly out of the head. On mine you can absolutely see the carbon just building up and creating less flow.
https://www.ebay.com/itm/Stainless-S...53.m1438.l2649
I am going to source some good manifolds that have all the stud holes intact so I can get a good install, then port match them.
in the future, when I learn how to weld I will take on headers, high flow Cats etc.
At least I can get the exhaust not to hit a 2mm lip directly out of the head. On mine you can absolutely see the carbon just building up and creating less flow.
#80