Poweron
03-11-2014, 01:16 PM
Hi all,
I'm Erik, currently designing the intake/exhaust systems for Columbia University. This forum definitely has some great info over the past few months that I've been reading posts.
More to the point, I've been reading Blair's "Design and Simulation of Four-Stroke Engines" (an excellent resource) and am unable to find what Blair is talking about in chapter 7 when he mentions a so-called "two-box exhaust silencer" (page 743 if you have the book). This specific muffler can apparently reduce the dB output significantly and is second in torque output only to a straight pipe, essentially exhaust without a muffler. I've only been able to find "two-stage" mufflers available from various suppliers and would like to know if anyone has an idea of what Blair is referring to and what manufacturers make these so that I could reach out to get more details on their design. Getting better performance and less noise in one package doesn't seem to logically go together, unless Blair's comparisons are unfair due to dimensional differences in the specific mufflers he compares.
I'm Erik, currently designing the intake/exhaust systems for Columbia University. This forum definitely has some great info over the past few months that I've been reading posts.
More to the point, I've been reading Blair's "Design and Simulation of Four-Stroke Engines" (an excellent resource) and am unable to find what Blair is talking about in chapter 7 when he mentions a so-called "two-box exhaust silencer" (page 743 if you have the book). This specific muffler can apparently reduce the dB output significantly and is second in torque output only to a straight pipe, essentially exhaust without a muffler. I've only been able to find "two-stage" mufflers available from various suppliers and would like to know if anyone has an idea of what Blair is referring to and what manufacturers make these so that I could reach out to get more details on their design. Getting better performance and less noise in one package doesn't seem to logically go together, unless Blair's comparisons are unfair due to dimensional differences in the specific mufflers he compares.