Head porting

minimivic

Drives a 16v mini
Aug 26, 2006
189
0
Dorset
www.btinternet.com
I've built the engine now, scat rods etc, and have a set of supertech valves (thanks bill).

The exhaust outlet is smaller than the manifold so there is a lip, do I need to match the port to the manifold to help flow?
Other wise is there a great benefit to getting the head professionally ported and matched. Can the inlet be taken out to large port size ready for a better intake manifold at a later date
Turbo will be a GT3071r
who is good for head flowing? any recommendations?
 

Triple D

Guest
and that engine is going in a mini :-o fukcing hell mate, you going 4wd aswell?
sory i cant answer any questions on how to port the exhaust manifold though.

Good luck with the build chap
 

YIN

Leon cupra Mk2
Oct 6, 2003
904
3
Dudley
www.futuremark.com
minimivic is this a pic of your car then and the owner of the vtec one

Audi-engine.jpg
 
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Triple D

Guest
:-o That looks fooking amazing :cheers: that is gonna be one hell of a sleeper when its done :lol:
 

air121005

Active Member
Sep 28, 2006
1,609
6
Worcestershire
thats going to be a beast!

engine looks a good fit btw!

if your just going to open the lip of the port to match the manifold, i wouldn't have thought that would make much improvement as the ports diameter would be mostly unchanged. :confused:

serious gains would be achievable from opening the whole port out, multi angled valve seats, have the valves turned down polished and reduced in mass, contouring the valve stem seats, polish the exhaust ports to a high mirror finish for extremely good air flow and heat reflection.
do the same the inlet ports except leave these un-polished as this agitates the air / fuel mixture and creates better combustion!
 

ibizacupra

Jack-RIP my little Friend
Jul 25, 2001
31,333
19
glos.uk
thats going to be a beast!

engine looks a good fit btw!

if your just going to open the lip of the port to match the manifold, i wouldn't have thought that would make much improvement as the ports diameter would be mostly unchanged. :confused:

serious gains would be achievable from opening the whole port out, multi angled valve seats, have the valves turned down polished and reduced in mass, contouring the valve stem seats, polish the exhaust ports to a high mirror finish for extremely good air flow and heat reflection.
do the same the inlet ports except leave these un-polished as this agitates the air / fuel mixture and creates better combustion!

you say this but have you ever looked at the valves on 1.8T?????

in this case LEAVE the valves ALONE.
they are black nitrided one piece intakes and inconel exhaust valves, hard chromed & are profiled correctly, with only 6mm stems as std.

and follow the advise in this KS bulletin>> http://badger-5.com/bin/5v-installation-note-supertech.pdf
 
If you really mean the exhaust port (rather than the inlet port) do NOT under ANY circumstances make it a smooth lip-less flow from the actual port into the exhaust manifold!!! There needs to be a lip here, something around 2.5 to 3mm (i.e. exhaust manifold flange port is bigger than the head port) to form a deliberate step between the exhaust port in the head and the entry to the exhaust manifold. This "anti-reversal" step prevents backflow into the head, especially important on big boost turbos. where typically EBP is 2 or 3 times boost pressure.
 

h17och

the hunt is over. 460bhp
Sep 1, 2005
3,504
1
Dunstabubble
If you really mean the exhaust port (rather than the inlet port) do NOT under ANY circumstances make it a smooth lip-less flow from the actual port into the exhaust manifold!!! There needs to be a lip here, something around 2.5 to 3mm (i.e. exhaust manifold flange port is bigger than the head port) to form a deliberate step between the exhaust port in the head and the entry to the exhaust manifold. This "anti-reversal" step prevents backflow into the head, especially important on big boost turbos. where typically EBP is 2 or 3 times boost pressure.

agreed, step = good

the 1.8t heads are pretty crappy, you will get minimal gains from porting it, idealy they need to be total reshaped and start a fresh as the shape they are as standard is a total down fall

i belive to get a good shape they need to be filled and re cut

ive looked into it and its big money!

HoocH
 

minimivic

Drives a 16v mini
Aug 26, 2006
189
0
Dorset
www.btinternet.com
Yes, I thought step=good.

An incredible project, well done. Why have you left a gutter round the roof? When we used to de-seam them, we always took the gutter off. :shrug:

I needed something to bond the carbon roof onto so a 12mm lip is usefull and I think they look better with the roof gutter anyway
 

Yumann

Full Member
May 17, 2002
1,638
0
Glasgow
If you really mean the exhaust port (rather than the inlet port) do NOT under ANY circumstances make it a smooth lip-less flow from the actual port into the exhaust manifold!!! There needs to be a lip here, something around 2.5 to 3mm (i.e. exhaust manifold flange port is bigger than the head port) to form a deliberate step between the exhaust port in the head and the entry to the exhaust manifold. This "anti-reversal" step prevents backflow into the head, especially important on big boost turbos. where typically EBP is 2 or 3 times boost pressure.

So going by this I take it when you enlarge the exhaust port you must enlarge the mani to create a step :confused:
 

h17och

the hunt is over. 460bhp
Sep 1, 2005
3,504
1
Dunstabubble
aslong as there is a difference to create a restriction from the airflow flowing backwards. i believe its because of the pressure in the mani
 

DPJ

...........
Dec 13, 2004
7,996
2
NN Yorks / Salento
www.seatcupra.net
Say the gas pressure at the exit point of the exhaust port is x psi. As it goes out into a wider diameter tube, its pressure will drop because it is not contained in the smaller space any more. It's the pressure differential that helps prevent reversed flow.
 
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