
BHP & Torque.
Forum rules
By using this site, you agree to our rules. Please see: Terms of Use
By using this site, you agree to our rules. Please see: Terms of Use
i think the main point to bare in mind is that the higher the revs the higher the stresses on all of the engine components, so things will wear out much faster, and are more likely to break. There are modifications you can do that produce no extra power, but make the engine last longer, such as fitting a centre main bearing cap, fitting a crank damper from a mini, and for very high revs having all the crank/rods/flywheel balanced.
so in conclusion dunketh's engine is wearing out faster than everyone elses!!
Picky
so in conclusion dunketh's engine is wearing out faster than everyone elses!!
Picky
1969 Four door Saloon Old English White 1275 with ported head and HS4 carb. Wolseley 1500 front brakes. Currently off the road with a leaky master cylinder!
If you've slapped a HIF44, a water heated inlet manifold and a better cam/head combination then yes, it really is that bad. All these things are a waste with the standard exhaust if its power you are after - they are not timing or needle experiments they are stage 3 mini tuning elements and the exhaust is usually the first thing to be changed. If its more power you want, change the breathing!dunketh wrote: I've noticeably improved my power through home tuning on several occasions with timing and needle experiments. That's all on the standard 1098 exhaust and inlet setup. Is the Minor exhaust really that bad?
Kirsten (me not the car) is my name and I'm male!!


-
- Minor Legend
- Posts: 1010
- Joined: Thu Apr 28, 2005 9:59 am
- Location: Werrington, Stoke-on-Trent
- MMOC Member: No
I had problems with my A35 exhaust blowing at the manifold where the downpipe attaches.KirstMin wrote: All these things are a waste with the standard exhaust if its power you are after If its more power you want, change the breathing!
In the end I managed to get a traditional cast iron clamp that sealed it.
The car then hardly ran.
The club told me there was a batch of rogue silencers which had the wrong internal perforated sheet.
I removed my exhaust, opened up the silencer and found I had one of the duff items. Wanting to get the car back on the road, and seeing the exhaust system was nearly new, I drilled all the holes out before rewelding.
No more blown joints (due to back pressure) but also gained increased acceleration without excess noise.
A restrictive exhaust is one of the first things I'd change in future before carb, head or manifolds on any of my vehicles.
Paul Humphries
It's 6k revs that the 1098 engines don't like - good grief, 4k is only about 65 mph ! And yes the standard exhaust is ghastly, however i still haven't manged to change mine yet and the car goes very well indeed with 940 head and big carb etc. I have no doubt it will be even better when I finally get time to make up a decent big bore system with LCB manifold. But have other priorities right now !!!



-
- Minor Legend
- Posts: 1401
- Joined: Tue Jun 28, 2005 12:16 pm
- Location: Trowbridge, Wilts
- MMOC Member: No
lol.. You do have to admire just how tough an A series is. I've never actually managed to kill one yet.so in conclusion dunketh's engine is wearing out faster than everyone elses!!
Thinking about it I probably only go as high as 5000's. After my recent bout of tinkering I'm finding I can get a little more speed for less revs.
Still, it does 70 every day with fail on the road back and from work. Occasionaly 80-90 if I'm trying to prove something or I'm bored.


I'll change my exhaust system when someone starts selling them at a decent price.
What would Macgyver do..?


-
- Minor Addict
- Posts: 833
- Joined: Sun Jun 13, 2004 12:47 pm
- Location: Colne Lancs.
- MMOC Member: No
I think the silencers in standard exhaust systems are the main "bottleneck" in terms of airflow. if you swapped the metro standard silencers for performance "straight through" silencers then that would be a large improvement. The 3 into 2 metro manifold works in a similar way to an LCB exhaust I believe, so replacing this with a high performance LCB would only improve the performance a little bit.
Picky
Picky
1969 Four door Saloon Old English White 1275 with ported head and HS4 carb. Wolseley 1500 front brakes. Currently off the road with a leaky master cylinder!
-
- Minor Addict
- Posts: 833
- Joined: Sun Jun 13, 2004 12:47 pm
- Location: Colne Lancs.
- MMOC Member: No
I see. I suspect the main problem with converting the metro system is it will not have the bend in it for your rear axle. I have the full maniflow setup (lcb and exhaust) which is brilliant performance but mild steel and possibly over priced.
1969 Four door Saloon Old English White 1275 with ported head and HS4 carb. Wolseley 1500 front brakes. Currently off the road with a leaky master cylinder!
-
- Minor Legend
- Posts: 1401
- Joined: Tue Jun 28, 2005 12:16 pm
- Location: Trowbridge, Wilts
- MMOC Member: No
I was going to build a system that exited in front of the rear wheel but was worried about fumes as I've got a door back there!
You can buy all the parts (minus the manifold) from Burton Power. They even do bends that should go over the rear axle no problem.
Thing is, when I priced it all up it wasn't all that cheap - especially considering it would be only mild steel non-expertly made by yours-truly.
You can buy all the parts (minus the manifold) from Burton Power. They even do bends that should go over the rear axle no problem.
Thing is, when I priced it all up it wasn't all that cheap - especially considering it would be only mild steel non-expertly made by yours-truly.
What would Macgyver do..?

