When the heads and intake manifold dyno testing is concluded, an extensive exhaust system test is planned. At this point I have the following exhaust systems on hand in which to test.
EMC four tube stepped headers with 3½” X 10” collectors w & w/o mufflers
EMC four tube stepped headers with 3½” X 28” collectors w & w/o mufflers
Fenderwell 1 5/8” four tube headers with 3” collectors
Fenderwell 1¾” four tube headers with 4” collectors
Pickup Tri-Y 1 5/8” headers with 2½” collector opening. Lead pipes being considered.
Thunderbird short tube Tri-Y 1¾” headers with 2½” collector opening. Lead pipes being considered.
Reds/Hedman short tube headers with 4” long 2” diameter lead pipes
Rams horn exhaust manifolds with 4’ long 2½” diameter lead pipes w & w/o mufflers
Stock 1957 exhaust manifolds with 4’ long 2” diameter lead pipes
Four tube 1¾” headers with 3” collectors w& w/o mufflers (built for dyno testing)
Four tube 1¾” headers with 3” collectors (custom for a ’56 Ford racecar)
This looks to be a minimum of fifteen different test variables and likely at least 30 dyno pulls on the engine as each variable is normally tested twice.
The EMC headers have a 3½” collector but the collectors are now double walled with a 2½” smaller collector inside the larger one which helped the EMC engine. That same header is currently being used on the 312 dyno mule without any changes from when it was used in the EMC competition. I’m currently building some new 1 ¾” tube headers for the Y dyno engine with 3” collectors and without the stepped tubes as are currently being run. There’s also another set of 1¾” tube headers of a slightly different design available that were just built for a ’56 Ford drag car that’s currently going together.
It must be remembered that dyno testing is WOT testing and smaller sized headers are not necessarily bad at low rpms and at a cracked open throttle operation. It’s only when the engine is at full throttle that a larger volume of ingested fuel air mixture must be purged from the engine and that’s where sizing becomes critical as scavenging becomes a major player. As a general rule, being too large on header tube size is not as detrimental to overall engine performance as being too small.

Lorena, Texas (South of Waco)