Cutouts for Strip only, beneficial?

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Been thinkin on that issue myself Rusty. A guy COULD buy 2 sets and rig it up so 1 set closes and the other opens. A little cutting and welding ............not that hard. BUT, the cut outs in the exhaust side would be restrictive when the loud side is opened up. OR.......

Some genius needs to invent a sort of "U" pipe that bolts to the headers, with a blade that just goes back and forth, from the open side to the exhaust side. Doesn't really sound that difficult to engineer if you're already making electric cutouts.
I can see a "pin" with two round plates 90 degrees from each other and have the pin rotate so one is closed and the other open. It wouldn't be hard to do and I'm surprised there's not something like that out there.
 
One thing to consider when determining if it’s worth it or not is the size of the exhaust after the cut out. Having 255 cid going through 2.5” at 6500 there would be a benefit you would think but as I said before headers with a collector extensions make more power that open headers and you actually need to tune the length of the extension so it’s not as simple as having an exit for the exhaust before going through the rest of the system.
I would approach this with building a system that will cos the least amount of power loss, probably a 3.5” system with race bullets.
 
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One thing to consider when determining if it’s worth it or not is the size of the exhaust after the cut out. Having 255 cid going through 2.5” at 6500 there would be a benefit you would think but as I said before headers with a collector extensions make more power that open headers and you actually need to tune the length of the extension so it’s not as simple as having an exit for the exhaust before going through the rest of the system.
I would approach this with building a system that will cost the least amount of power loss, probably a 3.5” system with race bullets.
I was just typing "tuned" collector extension lol
 
With a properly sized and efficient exhaust system, I'd bet cutouts get you LOUD, and that's it. But frankly, I've always raced corked up, so I'd pass on extra noise for no reason.
 
With a properly sized and efficient exhaust system, I'd bet cutouts get you LOUD, and that's it. But frankly, I've always raced corked up, so I'd pass on extra noise for no reason.

This. As is often said, an engine is an air pump. It's a complete system and there are a lot of things that work together to tune it to specific conditions. Needing "back pressure" is one of those myths that always annoys me as it's focusing on the wrong thing. Back pressure is not what you need, though it's often the easier thing to measure. What you are really after is flow velocity to help pull the gas out of the pipes. Back pressure is often just the side effect you see from that because a narrower pipe will flow faster, but at slightly more restriction. The other thing to be aware of is where that restriction is in the system. You could just crimp the end of your tail pipe if you think you need back pressure and it would only hurt you, but stepping down the whole system from 3" to 2.5" could net the same change in pressure, but better overall flow in some cases.

Though to the point of the original post, I doubt open headers will make much difference at all if you have a good exhaust system on the car to begin with. I have some electric cutouts on my car for pure novelty factor more than anything. They are fully variable so I can open them as much or as little as I want, so I just call them the volume switch for the exhaust. I love the way they sound fully open while idling, but I do think they are a bit trashy sounding to drive around town with open. If I crack them just a bit it's not too bad, but they stay closed more often than not anymore. I've debated hooking them up to the Raspberry Pi and Megasquirt setup to automatically control them with rpm, but they don't move near fast enough and it would likely wear the motors out as I'm pretty sure they aren't meant to be used that much.
 
Cutouts will pick up power especially if the exhaust system is a bit undersized or restrictive to begin with for the size and HP of the engine. What's really important is to have the cutouts sufficiently downstream of the collectors to keep the secondary tuned length. Iirc around 30-44" depending on the effective RPM range of your engine. However if the pipes coming off the header collectors aren't the same diameter as the collectors (for example, immediately goes from 3" down to 2.5" like most systems) there's no secondary tuning happening anyway.
 
Engine masters did a cutout episode deliberately trying to make the cutouts look good. They failed in my opinion
They used a hugely powerful big inch bbc, that should have had a 3 1/2 or 4 inch system with straight thru mufflers.
Instead they used a 2 1/2 system with turbo mufflers (on an 800 hp engine!?!)
Of course the cutout looked good.
But even EM admitted if the cutouts were installed too far back, the engine sounded like ****.
My personal opinion? MOST street driven cars with mild cams sound like **** uncorked.
 
Engine masters did a cutout episode deliberately trying to make the cutouts look good. They failed in my opinion
They used a hugely powerful big inch bbc, that should have had a 3 1/2 or 4 inch system with straight thru mufflers.
Instead they used a 2 1/2 system with turbo mufflers (on an 800 hp engine!?!)
Of course the cutout looked good.
But even EM admitted if the cutouts were installed too far back, the engine sounded like ****.
My personal opinion? MOST street driven cars with mild cams sound like **** uncorked.
Yep, I watched that before posting and did not believe what they were saying and all you guys confirmed my suspicions
 
If your exhaust system is designed with the cutouts in mind, you'll see benefits. If not and they are just "add ons" it's less likely.
 
1973 Scamp that is my hotrod and not a race specific car. It has full interior, etc. RB 512ci, 440 source stroker kit with lightweight crankshaft, forged pistons, 10.83 CR. Trick Flow 240 heads, 440 source aluminum rockers 1.6 RR, Trick Flow single-plane intake. Holley Super Sniper EFI, HyperSpark ignition, coil & distributor. TTI 2 inch headers. Hughes 3000 stall converter. 727 transmission with Transgo TF2 valve body mods. B&M Quicksilver shifter. Gear Vendors overdrive to 8 3/4 rear end with 3.91 gears, braced in back. SS leaf springs.Viking Warrior shocks. Pypes exhaust 3" into 2.5". RacePro mufflers. Mickey Thompson ET street SS Drag radials 275/60-15). Current cam specs 244°/252° @ .050”, 282°/290° ADV, .516”/.537” lift (1.5:1 rocker), 112° LSA, .016”/.018” lash, Solid lifter from Oregon Cams.

I took out the x pipe as I needed some room for the gearvendors install. So my exhaust goes straight into the racepro mufflers. The car runs great at the moment. Our last race was 11.46 at 118. Prior to that we were at 11.7-12 sec. Amateur drivers here so there is much to be improved on. Launch and strip manners are good.

I know the cam is not ideal for naturally aspirated without nitrous as it was designed for a bit of boost. This may happen but not this year as I do not want to put a rollcage in. I would like to have consistent 11.50 time.

SO.... Would the installation of cutouts provide a bit of an advantage to take the 11.8s times to be more in the 11.5 times? I would never run open cutouts on the street. Older video of my exhaust sounds.


Last years race.

summits website says/used to say , a 500'' engine needs 3 1/2'' exhaust , I have 3 1/2'' dual dumped on mine , 3.5 bulllit mufflers , with 3.5 spiral tubed drove up inside and tack welded , before dumping , 3.5 h pipe added later , never had any drone or problems , but it is a hair loud ...
 
Engine masters did a cutout episode deliberately trying to make the cutouts look good. They failed in my opinion
They used a hugely powerful big inch bbc, that should have had a 3 1/2 or 4 inch system with straight thru mufflers.
Instead they used a 2 1/2 system with turbo mufflers (on an 800 hp engine!?!)
Of course the cutout looked good.
But even EM admitted if the cutouts were installed too far back, the engine sounded like ****.
My personal opinion? MOST street driven cars with mild cams sound like **** uncorked.
agree 100%. Hell, mine is by no description "mild", and i still think it sounds like crap with open cutouts. Now drop the mid pipes and put on a 13 inch, 31/2 extension...........music to my ears. Shakes the whole damn neighborhood. they just LOVE me.:eek:
 
I see about .050 difference between open and closed on my sbc G body. 1/2 MPH. All steel upper 10. street car. Full exhaust w/Xpipe 2.5in. It does help you hear your own car while wearing a helmet against a louder car.
 
I have a 292” Ford W and I use 3” bullets with turndowns, basically header mufflers with turndowns and they don’t slow the car a bit.
 
I don’t know the weight of your car, or your track day weather conditions, but I think a 10.8:1 CR, 500 in motor w/ TF heads in an A Body is normally a very low 11 sec. street car. I don’t know if cut-outs will help, but I do know that you don’t need them for low 11s.

I really think that tuning and track time is what you likely need, unless there is something else amiss. Based on what you’ve posted, if there was one thing I’d change, it would be the cam. Not a crazy change, and with that, you should be looking at 10s, IMO.
 
I don’t know the weight of your car, or your track day weather conditions, but I think a 10.8:1 CR, 500 in motor w/ TF heads in an A Body is normally a very low 11 sec. street car. I don’t know if cut-outs will help, but I do know that you don’t need them for low 11s.

I really think that tuning and track time is what you likely need, unless there is something else amiss. Based on what you’ve posted, if there was one thing I’d change, it would be the cam. Not a crazy change, and with that, you should be looking at 10s, IMO.
I have considered the cam change and that may happen next winter. I should update the specs on the car to reflect the 1.6 rockers. The lift is actually 550/573 with those. Andy Finkbeiner reviewed my datalogs and said that my torque converter was actually performing like a 4500 stall instead of the 3000 that it is rated at. Andy also did a great article on rockers but found no advantage to higher lift. His car was pretty well maxed out for intake and head flow so maybe that was not a limiting factor. This year I am going to work on the EFI tune, suspension and driver skills. It is so streetable right now, I would hate to mess that up.
 
1.70 second 60 ft times? Maybe the converter is bad and eating up power?
This was the last run of the season. Car 110

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