Bit technical. Surely removing the cat increases power because its removing a restriction. End of?
And what does removing that restriction do exactly?
Do you think you are gaining power purely from reduced pumping losses in the engine?
Cause if so then seriously people need their heads read thinking thats going to make 5-10bhp of difference! 0.05 maybe, lol
The reason that removing an exhaust restriction works to gain power, is that it reduces the EBP, and then because of the reduced EBP the cylinder pressures near to TDC and EBP stay further away from equilibrium which means that as a result the engine manages to empty the cylinder better, then because it has emptied the cylinder better it means that on the next intake stroke it does a better job of filling the cylinder with fresh intake charge, which means it swallows more fuel and air.
Try and think through the WHOLE combustion process, not just look at one part of it or you'll just keep making schoolboy errors mate.
So seen as your the resident Clio expert is the Clio 172 decat not restrictive in any way? Just asking
Yes it is restrictive to an extent, but on the standard exhaust and standard engine its not a big restriction though.
The more air you are trying to flow in the first place, the more of a restriction it becomes, so the gains from removing it will be linked to what else you have done.
Unless yours is actually getting blocked up with carbon deposits or from it breaking down, then on a standard car the gains are going to be very small indeed.
Probably the best value new engine mod on the market for a Clio. You can notice the difference. Spins up noticeably quicker
Ermmm clio's arent turbo'd - you're talking s**t
De-cats lose power if anything due to the lack of back pressure. Worst mod ever unless all you want is noise
Ermmm clio's arent turbo'd - you're talking s**t
De-cats lose power if anything due to the lack of back pressure. Worst mod ever unless all you want is noise
Ermmm clio's arent turbo'd - you're talking s**t
De-cats lose power if anything due to the lack of back pressure. Worst mod ever unless all you want is noise
Its either restrictive or it isnt. It doesn't become less restrictive on a standard engine, it just becomes less noticeable.
When I fitted my decat, like I said in the post above, it pulled a lot better and smoother at lower revs. It probably didn't increase the power but it improved the delivery of it.If you want power you want VELOCITY of exhaust gas. The standard exhaust is designed to do this.
The reductions in pipe size around the cat that people think are bottle necks are more likely designed to increase the speed of the escaping gases.
People think increasing the bore of the exhaust and removing the cat etc.. means it's easier for exhaust gases to escape so you get more power - but what actually happens is the gases slow down which is worse for performance
BOTTOM LINE is that de-cats do f**k-all for a standard engine. THey make it sound louder and make you fail the MOT
If you've fitted cams, bodies, charger or turbo then it might help - but on a standard car it's £130 that you'd be better off spending elsewhere
LOL whattttttttttt
If you want power you want VELOCITY of exhaust gas. The standard exhaust is designed to do this.
The reductions in pipe size around the cat that people think are bottle necks are more likely designed to increase the speed of the escaping gases.
People think increasing the bore of the exhaust and removing the cat etc.. means it's easier for exhaust gases to escape so you get more power - but what actually happens is the gases slow down which is worse for performance
BOTTOM LINE is that de-cats do f**k-all for a standard engine. THey make it sound louder and make you fail the MOT
If you've fitted cams, bodies, charger or turbo then it might help - but on a standard car it's £130 that you'd be better off spending elsewhere
The standard exhaust and cat is designed to meet EU regulations on noise and pollution levels.
This rubbish about back pressure and loosing power as a result doesn't happen with a mere 2.5 inch bore exhaust on a Clio. If you went beyond this then yes.
Removing a cat on a 172 does aid performance. It might not get you anything in the way of raw gains but it free's the engine up due to loosing the restriction of the internal cat material.
If you want power you want VELOCITY of exhaust gas. The standard exhaust is designed to do this.
But bare in mind that the moment they then go back to the full bore diameter it will of course then stall.The reductions in pipe size around the cat that people think are bottle necks are more likely designed to increase the speed of the escaping gases.
A single pipe of the required diameter would do this better than a complex structure like a cat which will typically destroy the sort of pulses you are aiming to maintain.People think increasing the bore of the exhaust and removing the cat etc.. means it's easier for exhaust gases to escape so you get more power - but what actually happens is the gases slow down which is worse for performance
I agree to a certain extent when dealing with a decent flowing cat like the 1*2's have, but once you are dealing with a 100K old cat that is either breaking down or carbon'ed up, the same is not always true, and on some other cars where the car is more restrictive its more beneficial to remove it.BOTTOM LINE is that de-cats do f**k-all for a standard engine. THey make it sound louder and make you fail the MOT
If you've fitted cams, bodies, charger or turbo then it might help - but on a standard car it's £130 that you'd be better off spending elsewhere
Im only wondering but shouldn't tuning company's that make claims on de-catting / exhausts improvements use a set car and dyno pre and post for proven results.
It would answer alot of peoples qestions on this forum without arguements
This thread is annoying me. So many self proclaimed gas flow experts
Can you back that up with LITERALLY ANYTHING?
I took my decat off and put my cat back on after running the decat for a year and gained a couple of seconds per lap at the same track last year - it had more torque and pulled better out of corners
I've not seen a single rolling road graph on here that shows they make any power at all
Only reason I'm not running one now is because the ITB's tend to pop and bang and knacker the cat
As for freeing the engine up - utter utter utter b****cks
There are cars on here with over 220bhp running very fast quarter miles still on ph1 172 cat's. The 182 cat is practically a sports cat it flows so well
The inlet on the 172 engine is far more restrictive than the exhaust system
Its a good stealth tactic, but its still divergent-convergent in shape which creates a buffer volume and not particularly aiding velocity. It's probably better with the cells left in!So taking this theory into account, removing the cells altogether = no internal restriction, maximizes flow even further.
The 182 is now a ''sports cat it flows so well'' to quote you yet the 172 cat happens to be a waste of time changing? How does this work? :S
The 182 cat is good because its only 180 cells (or something) which makes it more free flowing and less restrictive than a 172. So taking this theory into account, removing the cells altogether = no internal restriction, maximizes flow even further.
Lol at 2 seconds quicker a lap after refitting a cat, because it gives you that much more torque! Priceless that!
Phil, step away from the computer with all your Internet reading, you actually make yourself look like a complete idiot! Lol