TreeFiddyAre
Well-Known Member
I have to say I'm a bit baffled by the idea of putting this 8-4-1 exhaust on a GT350 with a Voodoo FPC engine. The whole point of 8-4-1 is to create an FPC sound with a CPC engine. An FPC engine doesn't need that arrangement to sound like an FPC engine - it is one!
If you find some Youtube videos of the 1967 GT40's, they had 7 liter CPC engines but they sound very FPC, and that's because the cylinder heads had were reversed with the exhaust ports in the valley. That allowed the headers to reside in the valley above the block with the runners arranged so each header had balanced exhaust pulses, just like an FPC has.
So putting an 8-4-1 on a Voodoo won't make it sound more like an FPC engine because it already is one. All it can really do is change the "tone" of the exhaust - higher pitch or something, just like any other aftermarket Voodoo exhaust.
If that's wrong, what am I missing? Is this really about people with Coyote swaps fixing the sound?
Fair questionâand youâre not wrong on the fundamentals.
Iâm not chasing âmake an FPC sound like an FPC.â The Voodoo already does that naturally, chaos and all. What I am after is manipulating pulse interaction, scavenging characteristics, and harmonic content to bias the exhaust toward a cleaner, higher-frequency pitch rather than just âlouder Voodoo with more crackle.â
An 8-4-1 on an FPC isnât about fixing firing order acousticsâitâs about how pulses pair, merge, and decay downstream. By controlling collector timing and reducing destructive interference between banks, you can shift the dominant harmonics upward. Think less thunderous baritone, more mechanical shriek at high RPM. Same song, different EQ.
As for powerâany gain is gravy. If it picks up a few ponies from improved scavenging at elevated engine speeds, great. If not, Iâll survive. This isnât a dyno-queen optimization exercise; itâs an acoustic engineering experiment with a side of âbecause racecar. âBut I have a feeling this system will produce great numbers down the road.
And yes⊠once itâs force-fed, the rate of RPM climb becomes the real party trick. If the exhaust can keep up with that kind of acceleration without turning into a metallic blender full of bolts, Iâll consider it a win. If not, wellâthe forum will get its 10-page thread anyway
So no, not about Coyotes trying to fake a flat-plane. Itâs about seeing just how high-strung and unhinged a GT350 can sound before physics files a noise complaint.
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