I'm both confused and a little frustrated. We need a 21" section of dry exhaust before the water injection elbow. The manifold from the Cummins engine has a threaded (2.5") output and I've got a carbon steel "unique" flange that the previous owner had welded up with a nipple that threads into this manifold. Clearly, I can just thread straight into the Cummins (if the exhaust hangars allow movement with expansion/contraction of the dry section as it heats up and cools. Or, I can get more standard flange...
Thought that this obtaining the piping would be fairly easy and straightforward since I'd heard that one could just use "black iron" plumbing pipe and super insulate it w/any number of things.
Well, you all probably know this (but I didn't!) "black iron" that's real iron isn't suitable for the super high temperatures of exhaust gas exiting the manifold. The stuff they sell these days and call "black iron" is simply steel anyway...
So, I'd also "heard" somewhere that one didn't want to use stainless steel pipe in this hot area off the manifold. Hummmm. I can FIND stainless steel (316) but can't recall why one might not wish to use it.
Does anyone have a dry (not water jacketed) section of exhaust? If so, what's it made of? How is it insulated? How does it deal with thermal expansion (flange system for expansion OR sliding w/in hangars?).
thanks!

Reply With Quote
