Turbo Manifold Design
Start talking about turbo exhaust manifold design and people have all sorts
of theories. Most say that equal-length, long runners should be used –
irrespective of the length of runner that then results. But others say runners
should be grouped on the basis of firing order. Sounds easy – until you ask some
questions. Like, grouped exactly how on the basis of firing order? Or, how
important is it that the runners are of equal length? For example, is it more
important that runner length be equal – or the runners are organised to provide
the best flow? After all, the longer the runner, inside a typical engine bay the
more bends it’s likely to have in it and the greater resistance it will pose to
flow.
Let’s take a look at what the experts actually have to say.
The original bible of turbocharging is Turbochargers, by Hugh MacInnes
(published by HP Books). Despite being first published in 1978 – and so
containing almost nothing that relates to EFI engines – the core content of the
book has stood up surprisingly well in the years since. MacInnes suggests that
turbo exhaust manifolds should use small diameter runners with about the same
internal area as the ports and that in turbo engines, the use of “smooth flowing
exhaust headers with beautiful swerving bends.... is more aesthetic than
power-increasing”. Except for V8 engines, he makes no comments at all about
grouping the flow from cylinders in any particular manner.
Another old book is Turbocharging and
Supercharging, by Alan Allard (first published by Patrick Stephens in 1982).
Allard says: “The main criteria when designing and fabricating an exhaust
manifold are: firstly, to build in sufficient strength to take the weight of the
turbocharger system and to remain rigid without distortion or fracture even when
working up to 1000 degrees C; and secondly, to have sufficient wall thickness
(3.0mm minimum is recommended) to withstand the corrosion effects of running up
to high temperature over a long period.”
Allard suggests the use of a log-type manifold pipe of not more than 2.5
times, and not less that double, the area of one exhaust port. The log is joined
to the individual exhaust ports with stubs with the same inside diameter as the
exhaust ports, each as short as possible and of equal length. The stubs can
enter the log at right-angles or be angled towards the turbo.
However, while not mentioned in the text, a diagram shows a 1-3-4-2 firing
order four cylinder engine using a manifold where cylinders 1 and 2, and 3 and
4, are paired and fed to a split-pulse turbine. In addition, again while it is
not discussed in the text, many turbo racing engines are shown where
equal-length long runners join at a common collector just prior to the
turbo.
Automotive Supercharging and
Turbocharging Systems was first published in 1992 by Motorbooks
International. The author is John Humphries. Of my references, this book
provides the most detailed treatment of turbo exhaust manifolds. However, rather
than making things clearer, if anything it further muddies the waters! The book
suggests that there are two fundamentally different approaches to turbo exhaust
manifold design.
The first is to use a manifold with sufficiently large internal volume that
the exhaust output pulses of each cylinder are damped and a more or less
constant pressure is available to the turbine. The internal volume of the
manifold sufficient to obtain this pulse dampening can be 1.4 – 6 times the
swept volume of the engine. That rules out pretty well all long runner exhaust
manifolds, although a log-type one of the sort suggest by Allard may fit into
the bottom end of this scale, and the current fashion in the US for mounting the
turbo at the back of the car (in a car with a front engine!) would also conform
to this approach.
The second approach is a pulse system, where the exhaust pulses provide
additional short-term energy to the turbine. In a pulse-type manifold, Humphries
suggests that the pipe runners should have a “cross-sectional area....not
significantly greater than the geometric valve area at full lift
[and]
these
connections should be kept short and free of sharp bends”.
He says the reflection of pulses within the system will be determined by pipe
length, exhaust temperature and the status (ie open, closed or partially open)
of the exhaust valves. In addition, at pipe junctions the exhaust pulses will
split, with smaller magnitude exhaust pulses travelling down each pipe. “The
overall pressure wave system that occurs in such a manifold will be very
complex, with pulses propagating from each cylinder, pulse division at each
junction, total or partial reflection at an exhaust valve...and reflection from
the turbine.”
In order to take advantage of this pulse flow, “narrow pipes from several
cylinders can be connected through a single branched manifold to one turbine....a
four stroke engine which can have its cylinders grouped into threes is
particularly attractive.” This is because “the opening periods of the exhaust
valves follow successively every 240 degrees with very little overlap between
them.... thus a sequence of pressure pulses arrives at the turbine...”
Humphries suggests that the use of twin turbos on a six cylinder engine
allows for efficient pulse operation, and where cylinder multiples are not in
threes, a single turbo entry can be linked to multiple cylinders through “pulse
converters”. Pulse converters are suitably shaped junctions which prevent
reverse pulse flow. Humphries shows a four cylinder exhaust manifold with
cylinders 1 and 2, and cylinders 3 and 4, paired and then coming together
through a pulse converter junction.
One of the more recent books on turbocharging is Corky Bell’s Maximum Boost (published by Robert
Bentley, 1997). Bell suggest that it
is important the manifold retains heat, prevents reverse flow (eg by the use of
so-called reversion cones in the first section of each runner), and is designed
to minimise thermal loads on each section of the manifold. The latter can be
achieved by the use of runners from each cylinder travelling separately to the
turbo inlet – that way, each runner is subjected only to the heating loads of
one cylinder. It is implied but not stated that controlling these heating loads
is more important than flowing the individual pulses in a sequence to the
turbine – in the diagram the pipes are of unequal lengths.
Bell also says that the experience
with turbo F1 cars suggests that “the best manifolding is multiple-tube,
individual runner style”. As with the other authors, he recommends the use of
relatively small diameter runners with large wall thicknesses. With regard to
pulse tuning, he says “a design that allows exhaust gas pulses to arrive at the
turbine at regularly spaced intervals is ideal but difficult to achieve”.
So what does one make of all of that?
Firstly, it’s clear that these authors agree that the use of heavy wall tube
(“steam pipe”) bends are preferable to thin gauge materials. Secondly, the
individual cylinder runners should be sized smaller rather than larger, being
near to port size. It also appears that if it is possible within the confines of
the engine bay, equal-length runners that join at the turbo are to be
recommended. In six cylinder engines, the grouping of two pairs of three
cylinders to feed either two turbos or a single split-pulse turbine housing is
to be favoured.
However, unequal length runners are extremely widely used (few if any factory
turbo cars have equal length runners in their cast manifolds) and some
aftermarket tubular manifolds use branchings of unequal length runners. (Most of
the latter are dubbed ‘pulse converter’ manifolds but whether the internal
junctions conform to pulse converter geometries is not known.) Not one of the best
known references is particularly critical of exhaust manifold designs which on
a naturally aspirated engine would be seen as fatally flawed.
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