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Date:         Mon, 11 Sep 2000 17:22:53 -0700
Reply-To:     Stephen Arbaugh <sneakers@OZ.NET>
Sender:       Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From:         Stephen Arbaugh <sneakers@OZ.NET>
Subject:      Re: Running without backpressure
In-Reply-To:  <39BC3F53.1DE56C63@gene.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"

Geeeez, I'm glad I didn't know this much some years ago. My '78 muffler brackets broke in such a way that it allowed me to slide the muffler off of or onto the connecting pipe (no catalytic converter), so I could have muffler and quiet or play "hot rod" and go deaf. My mileage was marginally better on the freeways, but once in town, I'd stop and slide the quiet thing back on and play innocent. I guess the fire gods didn't deem me acceptable for consumption...

steve '85 westy kent, wa

At 07:11 PM 09/10/2000 -0700, Daniel Schmitz wrote: >My understanding of running an engine with insufficient backpressure is >that it can cause the exhuast gas to exit the combustion chamber too >fast, which can burn the exhaust valves. The velocity of hot gases >flowing past the exhaust valves and through the exhaust port too fast >can actually cut grooves into the exhaust valve. > >But there could be other reasons, as well. > >Dan >


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