[s-cars] Emissions
TM
t44tq at mindspring.com
Tue Jun 25 09:43:54 EDT 2002
Dave's post attached below illustrates what I believe to be a continuing
trend- you will see more and more 4-wheel dynos for emissions testing,
so
those of you running w/o cats or considering it should consider the
possibility
that one day, you might not be able to pass emissions.
I'm all for performance, but I'm not one to remove cats. Just MHO.
If you've ever stood behind a race car with the engine running, you'd
know
exactly what kind of noxious emissions come out of engines, even late
model
996 GT-3RS.
Taka
-----Original Message-----
Mike: I presume the reason that no one answered you is no one has
actually tried to fix the heat shields - other than to pull the rusty
bits OFF the "Y" pipe. As I remember the story, the reason for the
shields is to retain heat upon initial start-up so the catalytic
converters "light" sooner rather than later (probably a matter of a few
minutes earlier than without the shield). I believe that once the car
is warmed up, and the cat's are at operating temperature, there is no
real benefit to the shielding (maybe some less heat in the floor of the
car), if you aren't acutally driving. If your local "Air Care" exhaust
emissions testing facility is like ours in Vancouver BC, they want you
to have run the car for a least ten minutes before you go for the test
(by the way, this is now on a 4 wheel dyno for the 4WD (including
quattro) cars). As a result, if the air quality don't really care about
those initial few minutes, then the shields have no real purpose. Maybe
it vas different in der Fatherland under strict TUV or DIN-type testing,
yes?
Dave F.
More information about the S-car-list
mailing list