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What the sceptic doesn't tell you (or know ??) is that in Europe many of the
high quality cars have air gap insulated fabricated (tubular) manifolds (not the cast iron stuff like the US manufacturers use). It is possible to make the components durable by good design and using good quality materials. But you can't take junk (mild steel) and a crap design that cannot deal with uneven thermal expansion and then wave some magic wand to make it super durable. Considering how expensive aircraft equipment generally is, there is no reason why the best materials shouldn't be used with a fair number of bellows couplings at about $15 a throw to produce a system that it totally insensitive to thermal expansion and oxidation effects. Then wrap the whole caboodle in an insulating wrap to protect all the other heat sensitive stuff in the engine compartment and forget about it. Keith "Hal Davey" schrieb im Newsbeitrag t... If I might throw $0.02 in on this. In researching heat protection I ran across this article which describes why you do not want to use wraps vs. ceramic coatings. http://www.centuryperformance.com/heatwraps.asp Cheers, Hal Davey |
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Uh, Keith, did you actually read the stuff at the site that
Hal pointed out? They are not talking about cast iron junk. Keith Olivier wrote: What the sceptic doesn't tell you (or know ??) is that in Europe many of the high quality cars have air gap insulated fabricated (tubular) manifolds (not the cast iron stuff like the US manufacturers use). It is possible to make the components durable by good design and using good quality materials. But you can't take junk (mild steel) and a crap design that cannot deal with uneven thermal expansion and then wave some magic wand to make it super durable. Considering how expensive aircraft equipment generally is, there is no reason why the best materials shouldn't be used with a fair number of bellows couplings at about $15 a throw to produce a system that it totally insensitive to thermal expansion and oxidation effects. Then wrap the whole caboodle in an insulating wrap to protect all the other heat sensitive stuff in the engine compartment and forget about it. Keith "Hal Davey" schrieb im Newsbeitrag t... If I might throw $0.02 in on this. In researching heat protection I ran across this article which describes why you do not want to use wraps vs. ceramic coatings. http://www.centuryperformance.com/heatwraps.asp Cheers, Hal Davey |
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