Question for exhaust experts. | FerrariChat

Question for exhaust experts.

Discussion in 'Technical Q&A' started by DMOORE, Dec 19, 2006.

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  1. DMOORE

    DMOORE Formula 3

    Aug 23, 2005
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    Darrell
    After the first of the year, I'm going to have the 30k service performed on my 355. It presently has new OEM headers installed (free of charge by FNA). Here is my question. If I were to have the headers INTERNALLY ceramic coated, would this prolong the service life of them? I have other cars with ceramic coated headers, and there is a huge difference of temp they give off after having this completed.
    Would the reduced amount of heat transfered to the metal be enough to make a difference. Just a thought. Ceramic coating is pretty cheap, especially compared to new headers. May be worth an experiment. What do you guys think?


    Darrell.
     
  2. MufflerMan

    MufflerMan Formula 3

    Jun 12, 2005
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    Colby Sandman
    I wouldn't recommend coating your headers. Ceramic coating works great keeping underhood temps down, but the heat doesn't go away. It is bottled up inside the header and cooks the steel in the header more than the stock heat shields do. The best thing you can do for header life is to let them dissapate as much heat as possible, even at the sacrifice of higher under hood temps. In a perfect world, you could remove the stock heat shields. The problem with doing that is the components around the headers would suffer from the direct heat. A friend of mine put a set of aftermarket headers on his Berlinetta and went through three alternators before going back to stock headers. The aftermarkets had no shields and were cooking the alternator.
    I would say the best way to combat the heat is to install a challenge grill (if you don't already have one), put a performance exhaust on (less backpressure, less heat), and finally ,if you are willing, take off the cats and put in test pipes. These three items will signifigantly reduce the heat your headers are exposed to and definitley prolong their life.
     
  3. Rifledriver

    Rifledriver Three Time F1 World Champ

    Apr 29, 2004
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    Brian Crall
    Colby I am in the process now of replacing the headers on a 355 that spent it's life with a Tubi, bypass pipes and a Challenge grill.

    The headers have to have heat shields or everything else under the hood will perish. Go with a set of Tubi insulated headers.
     
  4. MufflerMan

    MufflerMan Formula 3

    Jun 12, 2005
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    Colby Sandman
    Yes Brian that was my point, not remove the heat shields. Maybe I didn't convey my message well. As far as the bypass pipes, and challenge grill, I merely think it will prolong the inevitible header problems, not eliminate them. I wish I had a picture of the inside of that header we both dealt with on Dan's 355. Crazy what can happen to one of these headers. I am curious what your feelings are on the ceramic coating.
     
  5. DMOORE

    DMOORE Formula 3

    Aug 23, 2005
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    Darrell
    Thanks guys. My big question is, if I would ceramic coat only the inside of the header, would it help?
    Possibly reducing the temp transfered to the header itself?


    Darrell.
     
  6. No Doubt

    No Doubt Seven Time F1 World Champ

    May 21, 2005
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    I would think that ceramic coating would be a good thing. It's true that the internal temps will be higher inside the exhaust headers, but the ceramic will see most of that heat instead of the thin OEM metal.

    Likewise, the hotter internal exhaust is going to flow faster due to the physics of thermodynamics, essentially reducing back pressure some small amount (though the smaller internal diameter might negate that pressure advantage somewhat).

    Ask Vern Cornell. He's coated his 355 Challenge headers for a some time now, and he's got the track miles to have some valid feedback.

    For that matter, coat the outside of the headers too and ditch the factory shielding (not something to do if the outside isn't ceramic coated or thermotec wrapped, though).
     
  7. gothspeed

    gothspeed F1 World Champ

    May 26, 2006
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    Yes it would help! A big reason factory insulated/shielded headers go bad is they are insulated to keep the heat in the metal and when they get hot, the oxygen in the outer air attacks the stainless and breaks down the structure. If you insulate the "inside" assuming a thorough job, more of the heat will stay in the exhaust gases themselves. Even though the outer part of the tubing is not coated, it will still benefit because they will not be exposed to "as much" heat :). A probable downside is your cats may suffer from the added temps.

    When one buys aftermarket headers they always void the warranty when people use thermal wrap on them. This is the same reason.....the headers get hotter than normal with the wrap on them. But there is nothing to protect the "surface" of the pipes from the "oxygen" in the air. So idealy ceramic coating the inside and out is the ticket.

    To give you and idea of why the metal breaks down when heated:

    Imagine someone TIG welding without an inert gas shield.....the metal just gets contaminated by the oxygen in the ambient air. So the ceramic coating acts like an inert gas shield so when the metal gets hot, the oxygen cannot get to it :) !!
     
  8. MufflerMan

    MufflerMan Formula 3

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    I didn't realize you meant the inside of the header. I suppose this would help as it will keep the heat away from the stainless walls of the tubing. I have to say, I have no experience with this concept and I am interested in the result if it is done.
     
  9. robertinOK

    robertinOK Karting

    Dec 5, 2003
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    #9 robertinOK, Dec 20, 2006
    Last edited by a moderator: Sep 7, 2017
    I had the headers and the muffler system ceramic coated earlier this year; the inside and outside of each part were coated as they were dipped...I was under the understanding that this was normal?

    However, the results were excelent. The temps around the CV joints (512 BBi) are much reduced, the temps at the rear above the mufflers are reduced to the point I have removed the 'aftermarket' heat sheild that someone had fitted, and the looks are infinitely better!

    Lastly the sound has improoved...more of that 'monaco tunnel' howl as the rev's rise.

    The work was carried out by Airborn Coatings in Oklahoma City. The service was excelent, and the cost was very reasonable. (405) 685 4433 I have no affiliation with the comapany.

    Robert
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  10. DMOORE

    DMOORE Formula 3

    Aug 23, 2005
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    Robert, the system looks great. I'm thinking I'll get mine done when the engine is pulled. Since no one seems to think it would negatively impact the stainless headers, I feel it would be a cheap experiment on the stock headers. I feel I'm on borrowed time with the OEM headers anyways. Hell, the set on the car were free, so if it doesn't work, no biggie really. But, If it does, it would be great for other 355 owners to know. The old ounce of prevention.


    Darrell.
     
  11. MaleficVTwin

    MaleficVTwin F1 Rookie

    Jun 5, 2006
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    I had a set of ceramic coated headers on my TA. They were great. A good ceramic coater will do both inside and out of the pipe, which prevents heat transfer into the metal and into the engine compartment, and if done on both sides of the pipe it will prolong the life of the header. These guys will coat anything. Just send them the headers.

    http://www.jet-hot.com/?gclid=CKbjsLLPoYkCFShCYwod-CiJVA
     
  12. DMOORE

    DMOORE Formula 3

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    Jet hot actually did the headers on my off road car. It holds up very well.


    Darrell.
     
  13. enjoythemusic

    enjoythemusic F1 World Champ

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    +1 Jet Hot'ed the heavily tracked 308's headers.
     
  14. f355spider

    f355spider F1 World Champ
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    Darrell,
    I think so poorly of the stock headers, that I doubt it will do anything to help them, they are so hopeless. But as you said, what have you to lose? So why not, give it a try, and keep us posted. As Rifledriver says, be sure to reinstall the heatsheilds. You are planning to coat both inside and outside, yes?

    Dave


     
  15. DMOORE

    DMOORE Formula 3

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    After getting the feedback, I will have them done on both the inside and outside. Should be around the end of January or so. We'll see what happens.


    Darrell.
     
  16. snj5

    snj5 F1 World Champ

    Feb 22, 2003
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    I will be doing the same in/out to set of 3.2 Tubi s/s headers in January as well based on this and other threads. Should be interesting.
    Good luck and let us know!
     
  17. ferrarifixer

    ferrarifixer F1 Veteran
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    #17 ferrarifixer, Dec 20, 2006
    Last edited by a moderator: Sep 7, 2017
    Ceramic coating, like all refinishing, is all about preparation... I feel you couldn't be 100% sure of cleaning the inside a manifold well enough to be sure of it sticking properly... and if it comes off it'll go into your cats and cause problems there...

    If you had some new un used ones it'd be worth a try maybe...

    My 360C system is coated inside and out, and I don't use heatshields apart from one small one near the alternator.... but this is a race car...
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  18. JCR

    JCR F1 World Champ
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    Go ahead and coat them. Ceramet does a decent job (ceramic mettallic paint). That is what the majority of coaters use. The best is plasma sprayed zirconia coatings. Much more expensive and, well, the white color puts some off. Your choice: form or function. Stay away from header wraps. Those are what cooks the headers causing metal fatigue and failure.
     
  19. Valence

    Valence Formula Junior

    Jan 20, 2004
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    Does the zirconia coating stick well to poorly prepped surfaces, like the inside of a used header might be? I too thought about how bad little flakes of coating would be for your cats.
     
  20. Valence

    Valence Formula Junior

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    You know what would be cool? A solid ceramic manifold.
     
  21. No Doubt

    No Doubt Seven Time F1 World Champ

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    That's silly. That sort of rumor has been repeated too often. Thermotec header wrap is fine. I used it for 55,000 miles over ten years on the headers for a 1995 Corvette, and the exhaust headers still look like new today.

    What the header wrap *won't* do is help 355 owners save their OEM headers from their expected failures.

    Ceramic coating the interior (exterior too) walls of 355 OEM headers might save them, though.
     
  22. JCR

    JCR F1 World Champ
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    Zirconia is sprayed melted (high heat) from a gun. You won't get coverage past the first bend in the tube. There really is no reason to do the internals and with zirconia its really not done.
    http://www.swaintech.com/store.asp?pid=10969 and http://www.poeton.co.uk/coatings-motorsport.htm
    http://www.poeton.co.uk/w1/a800.htm
     
  23. speedmoore

    speedmoore Formula 3
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    Apr 15, 2003
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    I'm having a very hard time believing that ceramic coating the inside of the tubing is going to cause premature failure to the metal. Please explain the metalurgy that allows a colder metal to fail premature over a warmer non ceramic barrier stock pipe?

    The whole reason to ceramic coat the inside and outside of the header/exhaust is for gain in HP but also longevity as well as cooler temperatures in the engine bay.

    Ceramic coating is used in exhaust ports in the top of pistons as well as the combustion chambers for the same reason......ooops secret engine bldg techniques slipping away....

    Now if you coated only the outside, yes the metal would fatigue in a matter of about 10 race hours.

    Been there, done that....or am I smok'n crack?

    d
     
  24. JCR

    JCR F1 World Champ
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  25. speedmoore

    speedmoore Formula 3
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    Interesting. In my experience in racing, as well as turboing many a Ferrari & Porsche I've seen the exact opposite. It did in fact cause quicker failure and I would thus have to raise my eyebrow. I build on average around 10-15 pro race engines per year and have so for quite some time now.

    Insulation, thermotec does work and sometimes it has to be used in conjunction with ceramic coating or in use with even Inconel like we do in the Group C cars we run in historic venues now. IF you could put the thermotec inside as well as outside, I think it would be what the modern ceramics are doing at significant weight savings.

    Coatings are not black majic anymore. Your pro engine builders don't like talking about it as it's giving away an edge as it's only recently a necessity to be competive....as in two race engine rules and the demands placed upon lighter and faster moving components.

    d
     

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