C63 AMG Stainless Steel Header on SALE!!
I m gonna post sounds clip soon...great sound ever ...^^
Last edited by joo; Dec 14, 2010 at 08:31 PM.
I met my friend who installed this headers and I saw when his car was on dyno.
Would you please explaine me why it is not possible? This dyno does not show headers only. It is ecu tuned with headers. Not stock car with headers.
Next step up are short-tube headers as in this thread. After that are mid-length headers and then long-tube headers.
It depends on your goals and how much compromise you are willing to accept, in terms of HP and Drive-ability, which you should choose. Long-tube headers will generally give the maximum HP increase at the cost of low rpm torque and loudness.
Disagree with your opinion. Have you ever installed kleemann headers on your car? I felt a lot differences. Maybe you didnt. If it gives slight improvements, kleemann would not good business.
I met my friend who installed this headers and I saw when his car was on dyno.
Would you please explaine me why it is not possible? This dyno does not show headers only. It is ecu tuned with headers. Not stock car with headers.
I would even say that SAE is the norm and is the more commonly accepted measurement in everyday discussion.
So, when people look at a dyno graph and they see STD, they say, "okay, now lets see the real number, i.e., the one that will most closely reflect the engine's power potential that will manifest in driving situations."
STD numbers don't translate to the road simply because they're not relevant in everyday SAE dyno discussion.
What's odd, (and I'm not suggesting anything), it's just odd, is that the baseline run on this dyno reads right in line with what a stock C63 on 91 octane would read in SAE. So, was the baseline run measured in SAE?
Edit: And respectfully, my opinion, since it's not based on scientific fact, you can't increase the M156 engine's efficiency to such an extent that it would be able to increase it's max power by 127.37 rwhp (SAE) with the addition of shorty headers and a tune.
Last edited by SonnyakaPig; Dec 15, 2010 at 05:53 PM.
The Best of Mercedes & AMG
I totaly get that each format (STD vs SAE) can show different outputs but the point of the graph is the measurabe increase from base, on the same machine with the same car.
Last edited by callmiro; Dec 16, 2010 at 12:14 AM.
I totaly get that each format (STD vs SAE) can show different outputs but the point of the graph is the measurabe increase from base, on the same machine with the same car.
Was the baseline run done in SAE? If so, and the subsequent runs -- the ones with the headers and tune -- were in STD, then the graph would not show accurately measured increases.
But, even still, you hardly ever see vendors/tuners posting dyno results in STD, for the reasons I described above.
Was the baseline run done in SAE? If so, and the subsequent runs -- the ones with the headers and tune -- were in STD, then the graph would not show accurately measured increases.
But, even still, you hardly ever see vendors/tuners posting dyno results in STD, for the reasons I described above.
I should have been more specific.
Thanks for the clarification.
Do most people care about STD corrected numbers over SAE numbers? No. The point of posting STD corrected numbers is to show a high, peak hp number. It's for advertisement.
Of course, if the baseline run was corrected in STD, then we're just talking a gain here, not what the actual peak hp number that we all look to when we wonder how fast it will go.
Will you gain 127.37 rwhp (SAE), with these mods? I will go out on a very short limb and say, "no."
Plus, I would be concerned with the vastly different lengths of the primaries. How can that be a good thing?
To compare, long tube headers and a tune can net you around 100 rwhp gain. That is possible on the M156 engine.
I'm actually surprised that a manufacturer of headers would not be up-to-speed on the performance gains that long tube headers and a tune provide for our cars. If they were, they might add a section in their post that explains how astonished they were to find gains that exceeded the gains that can be found with LT's and a tune.
Last edited by SonnyakaPig; Dec 16, 2010 at 03:53 PM.
They don't look awful, but I'm not sure I'd throw "really good" and "great craftsmanship" into any descriptions of what we can see in the pictures. The flanges are monstrous, the welds appear thick and at times uneven, and the angles at which some of the pipes fit together really don't appear to be providing optimal flow into the collector.
To each his own I suppose... they are, after all, subjective opinions. What I would expect, possibly, is that they may be a decent relative value for C63 shorty headers.
Last edited by c32AMG-DTM; Dec 16, 2010 at 07:10 PM. Reason: typo
They don't look awful, but I'm not sure I'd throw "really good" and "great craftsmanship" into any descriptions of what we can see in the pictures. The flanges are monstrous, the welds appear think and at times uneven, and the angles at which some of the pipes fit together really don't appear to be providing optimal flow into the collector.
To each his own I suppose... they are, after all, subjective opinions. What I would expect, possibly, is that they may be a decent relative value for C63 shorty headers.










