For those who have ridden it, most have commented on the stronger mid range, courtesy of the exhaust valve, but is there any more engine braking when you throttle off??
but is there any more engine braking when you throttle off??

For those who have ridden it, most have commented on the stronger mid range, courtesy of the exhaust valve, but is there any more engine braking when you throttle off??

Don't do it Johnny .. it will just ruin your day![]()
For those who have ridden it, most have commented on the stronger mid range, courtesy of the exhaust valve, but is there any more engine braking when you throttle off??


Do you really think the valve in the exhaust silencer is responsible for the additional power and torque-rather than the raised compression and more efficient valve train with higher rev limit
As I read it, the valve in the exhaust silencer is a "by pass" to allow more noise at larger throttle openings and nothing more,or am I misinformed
Cannot comment on the engine braking or engine breaking![]()
yes
The flow in an exhaust system is pulsed and every time a pulse of exhaust gas runs through the pipe it causes area of vacuum behind it.
How big this vacuum is depends on the gas velocity. The higher the velocity, the bigger the vacuum the pulse has behind it.
This pulse can be used to scavenge the engine and the maximum scavenging effect is achieved if the gas velocity is high. By maximizing the scavenging effect it helps to pull pulses out of the combustion chamber, i.e extract the exhaust gas
This has the most effect when there's lots of time between the pulses...i.e., at low rpm. As the revs rise, the pulsed flow becomes more and more like constant flow, and consequently the scavenging effect is reduced.
So, at low rpm you need a small pipe to maximize scavenging, and at high rpm you need a big pipe to minimize pressure drop. The exhaust pipe can only be one size, so it's a compromise. Therefore for a given engine, one pipe diameter will be the most effecient at a certain rpm.
Torque is related to gas velocity and ideally you need exhaust components that are not restricive.
This can be achieved by using a flap to effectively make the exhaust pipe diameter smaller at low rpm (i.e. increase the gas velocity )and then open the flap for higher rpm where you need to reduce resistance to the gas flow.
So does it mean having an after-market Y-piece without a "balancing pipe" is having an effect on the torque?
yes
The flow in an exhaust system is pulsed and every time a pulse of exhaust gas runs through the pipe it causes area of vacuum behind it.
How big this vacuum is depends on the gas velocity. The higher the velocity, the bigger the vacuum the pulse has behind it.
This pulse can be used to scavenge the engine and the maximum scavenging effect is achieved if the gas velocity is high. By maximizing the scavenging effect it helps to pull pulses out of the combustion chamber, i.e extract the exhaust gas
This has the most effect when there's lots of time between the pulses...i.e., at low rpm. As the revs rise, the pulsed flow becomes more and more like constant flow, and consequently the scavenging effect is reduced.
So, at low rpm you need a small pipe to maximize scavenging, and at high rpm you need a big pipe to minimize pressure drop. The exhaust pipe can only be one size, so it's a compromise. Therefore for a given engine, one pipe diameter will be the most effecient at a certain rpm.
Torque is related to gas velocity and ideally you need exhaust components that are not restricive.
This can be achieved by using a flap to effectively make the exhaust pipe diameter smaller at low rpm (i.e. increase the gas velocity )and then open the flap for higher rpm where you need to reduce resistance to the gas flow.

For those who have ridden it, most have commented on the stronger mid range, courtesy of the exhaust valve, but is there any more engine braking when you throttle off??