A muffler (or silencer or back box in British English) is a device for reducing the amount of noise emitted by the exhaust on most vehicles. On internal combustion engines, the engine exhaust blows out through the muffler. The internal combustion engine muffler or silencer was originally invented by Milton O. Reeves.
Description
Mufflers are typically installed along the exhaust pipe as part of the exhaust system of an internal combustion engine (of a vehicle, or stationary) to reduce its exhaust noise. The muffler accomplishes this with a resonating chamber, which is specifically tuned to cause destructive interference, where opposite sound waves cancel each other out. Catalytic converters also often have a muffling effect. The effect is mainly generated largely by restriction, rather than by cancellation.
Advantages
Mufflers that reduced backpressure relative to earlier models became increasingly available in the late 20th century, and resulted in increased engine efficiency, performance, power output, and simultaneously decreased overall wear and tear on the engines' components, as well as noise to levels in compliance with the law.
Types and Positions of Mufflers
With cars, lengthwise underneath, blowing backwards at the rear:
- To the sides before the rear wheels.
- Mounted vertically behind the cab
- Crosswise under the front of the cab, blowing sideways.
- Usually, beside the engine and rear wheel blowing backwards.
- In more modern motorcycles, under the seat blowing backwards from under the back of the seat. (Under-slung).
Under-engine exhausts first reached popularity with Buell motorcycles, though by 2008 most manufacturers began using the under-engine design as well.
quote from : MUFFLER
Mini-Mufflers
A mini-muffler (also known as a "hotdog" in the auto industry) can be put in place of a normal muffler in a car exhaust system to "enhance" the sound of the exhaust for a car enthusiast. These are smaller, cost usually about half the price of a normal muffler and work in a similar way, but allowing more sound through. Changing the muffler / mini-muffler / catalytic converter combination can change the sound of a car's exhaust system considerably. Deliberately removing a muffler from a "factory" setup or using a muffler that is defective due to rusting risks the resulting noise being over government approved noise levels, and possible action by law enforcers. Nevertheless some motorcycle owners remove their mufflers just to make them louder.
But if you resist to using mini muffler, I can suggest this stuff for you
It called it DB KILLER (desibel killer) for muffler. Here is the specification
If you using this DB KILLER, your exhaust sound will decrease to 80%.
1 comments:
that is a good information. Very well.
Post a Comment