The date is quickly approaching for my new exhaust to be built and installed, so I was thinking about what I could do to get the most out of it.
I like the idea of wrapping it, but some google research has left me uncertain as to whether this is smart on 304 grade pipework... so obviously I'll take the advice of people I trust rather than random knobs on other forums.
(I like the idea of ceramic coating even more before anyone suggests it, but after paying for the exhaust I'm not sure my budget would stretch to ceramic coatings... and I've already got some wrap.)
There seems to be two schools of thought:
Some people say that the wrap causes the exhaust to corrode more quickly. - I personally don't believe any of the theories about wet wrap causing rust since it will dry pretty quickly once the exhaust gets to temperature... but I could believe that the higher pipe temperatures lead to more oxidation of the metal.
Also if you've got chloride present, there is something like accelerated pitting attack in steels at temperature which might result in premature failure (probably more around welds than anything else).
I had the mild steel front pipe wrapped on the old exhaust (although it never lasts that long) and I initially thought that was what had caused it to rust through at the hanger. However I noticed the back box was more rusted and the centre pipe was just starting to leak where the hangers are welded to that too. - My conclusion is that wrapping the exhaust didn't make the system rust quicker, but maybe I don't run the car hot and hard enough for it to make any difference.
So is there any quantifiable science here or is it just hearsay and conjecture? - If there's no real benefit I'll save myself the effort, and if it does more harm than good I'll definitely avoid it.
One last thing. - I noticed that on some of the forums I looked at people suggested wrapping mufflers; not to keep the heat down under their boot, but to reduce the noise.
That might be a top tip for people who want to keep their bore, but take some of the noise out?
I like the idea of wrapping it, but some google research has left me uncertain as to whether this is smart on 304 grade pipework... so obviously I'll take the advice of people I trust rather than random knobs on other forums.
(I like the idea of ceramic coating even more before anyone suggests it, but after paying for the exhaust I'm not sure my budget would stretch to ceramic coatings... and I've already got some wrap.)
There seems to be two schools of thought:
- Wrapping stainless (or mild steel; people are a little inconsistent about which one you can and can't) causes it to get too hot and degrade. - I guess the logic is that you get a phase change in the steel and without quenching it you lose the morphology and it becomes brittle?
This seems to be the main reason people claim their new (cheap?) stainless manifold cracked. - Wrapping stainless is a good thing because it takes the under bonnet heat away and keeps all the gases moving fast (and thereby improving throttle and turbo response).
Some people say that the wrap causes the exhaust to corrode more quickly. - I personally don't believe any of the theories about wet wrap causing rust since it will dry pretty quickly once the exhaust gets to temperature... but I could believe that the higher pipe temperatures lead to more oxidation of the metal.
Also if you've got chloride present, there is something like accelerated pitting attack in steels at temperature which might result in premature failure (probably more around welds than anything else).
I had the mild steel front pipe wrapped on the old exhaust (although it never lasts that long) and I initially thought that was what had caused it to rust through at the hanger. However I noticed the back box was more rusted and the centre pipe was just starting to leak where the hangers are welded to that too. - My conclusion is that wrapping the exhaust didn't make the system rust quicker, but maybe I don't run the car hot and hard enough for it to make any difference.
So is there any quantifiable science here or is it just hearsay and conjecture? - If there's no real benefit I'll save myself the effort, and if it does more harm than good I'll definitely avoid it.
One last thing. - I noticed that on some of the forums I looked at people suggested wrapping mufflers; not to keep the heat down under their boot, but to reduce the noise.
That might be a top tip for people who want to keep their bore, but take some of the noise out?