hanra Into the laaaake Member 1,532 Member For: 17y 5m 15d Gender: Male Location: Nrth Qld Posted 04/09/07 11:22 AM Share Posted 04/09/07 11:22 AM (edited) On my 1967 Mini Cooper S, ive got heat wrap around the extractors from the head, all the way down to the bottom part of the extractors. Some have said that it can shorten the life of the pipe as the heat cannot escape. Not sure on that one, but the car has only done 9000 miles in 5 years. So it dosnt get driven enough to worry about that. The question is, would it be a good idea to wrap the dump pipe in heat wrap from my turbo down to the exhaust on my XR6T? Edited 04/09/07 11:23 AM by hanra Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
senna_T Forged Member Lifetime Members 15,818 Member For: 17y 9m 22d Gender: Male Location: SW Sydney Posted 04/09/07 11:39 AM Share Posted 04/09/07 11:39 AM I've seen this done plentyof times, do it on your standard one, then after a while you can upgrade to a bigger ceramic coated one! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RAP1D Member Donating Members 3,739 Member For: 18y 6m 10d Gender: Male Location: Sydney NSW Posted 04/09/07 12:25 PM Share Posted 04/09/07 12:25 PM Ive used it on previous turbo cars... good to reduce temps around the pipe(s) and spose to speed up air flow ( in theory ) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
hanra Into the laaaake Member 1,532 Member For: 17y 5m 15d Gender: Male Location: Nrth Qld Posted 04/09/07 12:38 PM Author Share Posted 04/09/07 12:38 PM Yeah I would have thought it was ok to use. But wasnt sure as it seems like the temps are a lot higher on turbo cars exhaust, its all sort of concentrated in one area I guess. I mite grab some next time im at rice barn. At least I will only have to remove the rear heat shield to get it on. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ETM Member 1,194 Member For: 17y 8m 16d Gender: Male Location: syd south Posted 13/09/07 09:58 AM Share Posted 13/09/07 09:58 AM exhaust wrap causes the pipe to deteriorate.ive seen it way too many times,remove the wrap and the metal is just flaking away.I never use it,especially with ceramic coating being so cheap these days Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
tmac450 Member 1,650 Member For: 18y 2m 26d Gender: Male Location: NSW Posted 13/09/07 10:47 PM Share Posted 13/09/07 10:47 PM exhaust wrap causes the pipe to deteriorate.ive seen it way too many times,remove the wrap and the metal is just flaking away.I never use it,especially with ceramic coating being so cheap these daysI've seen this happen too, sepecially when used near joins (espeically on headders), the heat is trapped in, the metal gets too hot and the metal structure breaks down. Joins tend to crack very quickly. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Cubes Member 38 Member For: 19y 6m Gender: Male Posted 23/09/07 08:35 AM Share Posted 23/09/07 08:35 AM (edited) You want maximum heat retained within the exhaust manifold and turbine housing and you want the least heat retained within the dump pipe. Wrapping the dump/front pipe in theory reduces turbine efficiency; by how much who cares I can't pick it.Wrapping of the dump/front pipes is to prevent it cooking everything around it.If you have coolant hoses around near the dump its a very bad idea not to have some form of heat shield or wrapping of the dump. Glycol sprayed in a fine mist (caused by a pin *beep* hole in a coolant hose) is extremely flammable. It will send the engine bay up in flames. Edited 23/09/07 08:38 AM by Cubes Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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