(Oh man, I hope I haven't asked this before, and had it fall right out of my unicellular brain . . . !!!)
Somewhere along in the mid-to-late Seventies, IIRC, Konig made a change in the 2-into-1 headers he put on the fours (maybe twins as well, but the engine I saw was at Yelm, a B belonging to Dan Kirts). Before then, these headers were simply made from ordinary exhaust tubing of a constant diameter. But on this engine of Kirts', the part of the header right after the 2/1 merge was tapered . . . all except about the last 1/2" to 3/4" (as it appeared to me). This last little bit was of course sized to be a close sliding fit to the straight sliding section of the expansion chamber. All of this was like the older slider pipes with the exception of that tapered header pipe.
How did Dieter form this tapered section? Or maybe I should ask, how do you do it in a home shop? I can guess at how it might be done (by slitting a piece of straight tubing with a skunk wheel to make a very narrow pie-shaped cut-out, and then progressively welding from the apex of the cut while working the edges together). But I'd like to know how you ace metalmen do it.
Somewhere along in the mid-to-late Seventies, IIRC, Konig made a change in the 2-into-1 headers he put on the fours (maybe twins as well, but the engine I saw was at Yelm, a B belonging to Dan Kirts). Before then, these headers were simply made from ordinary exhaust tubing of a constant diameter. But on this engine of Kirts', the part of the header right after the 2/1 merge was tapered . . . all except about the last 1/2" to 3/4" (as it appeared to me). This last little bit was of course sized to be a close sliding fit to the straight sliding section of the expansion chamber. All of this was like the older slider pipes with the exception of that tapered header pipe.
How did Dieter form this tapered section? Or maybe I should ask, how do you do it in a home shop? I can guess at how it might be done (by slitting a piece of straight tubing with a skunk wheel to make a very narrow pie-shaped cut-out, and then progressively welding from the apex of the cut while working the edges together). But I'd like to know how you ace metalmen do it.
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