Diferencia entre revisiones de «Silenciador (motores)»

De Wikipedia, la enciclopedia libre
Contenido eliminado Contenido añadido
Orendona (discusión · contribs.)
Página creada con «{{Traducción}} {{About|the exhaust system component}} {{Multiple issues| {{refimprove|date=March 2011}} {{original research|date=March 2011}} }} Image:Ducati muffler.jp...»
 
Orendona (discusión · contribs.)
Sin resumen de edición
Línea 1: Línea 1:
{{Traducción}}
{{Traducción}}
{{Acerca|Componente del sistema de escape}}
{{About|the exhaust system component}}
{{Multiple issues|
{{Multiple issues|
{{refimprove|date=March 2011}}
{{original research|date=March 2011}}
}}


[[Image:Ducati muffler.jpg|thumb|right|Muffler (silver) and [[exhaust pipe]] on a [[Ducati]] 695 [[motorcycle]]]]
[[Image:Ducati muffler.jpg|thumb|right|Muffler (silver) and [[exhaust pipe]] on a [[Ducati]] 695 [[motorcycle]]]]

Revisión del 16:50 3 jun 2015

Plantilla:Acerca {{Multiple issues|

Muffler (silver) and exhaust pipe on a Ducati 695 motorcycle

A muffler (silencer in British English, or back box in Irish English) is a device for reducing the amount of noise emitted by the exhaust of an internal combustion engine.

History

The US Patent for an ‘Exhaust muffler for engines’ was awarded to Milton O. Reeves and Marshall T. Reeves of Columbus, Indiana of the Reeves Pulley Company on 11 May 1897. US Patent Office application № 582485 states that they “have invented certain new and useful Improvements in Exhaust-Mufflers for engines”.[1]

Description

Plantilla:Section OR

Dual tailpipes attached to the muffler on a passenger car

Mufflers are installed within the exhaust system of most internal combustion engines, although the muffler is not designed to serve any primary exhaust function. The muffler is engineered as an acoustic soundproofing device designed to reduce the loudness of the sound pressure created by the engine by way of acoustic quieting. The majority of the sound pressure produced by the engine is emanated out of the vehicle using the same piping used by the silent exhaust gases absorbed by a series of passages and chambers lined with roving fiberglass insulation and/or resonating chambers harmonically tuned to cause destructive interference wherein opposite sound waves cancel each other out. An unavoidable side effect of muffler use is an increase of back pressure which decreases engine efficiency. This is because the engine exhaust must share the same complex exit pathway built inside the muffler as the sound pressure that the muffler is designed to mitigate.

Some vehicle owners remove or install an aftermarket muffler when engine tuning in order to increase power output or reduce fuel consumption because of economic or environmental concerns, recreational pursuits such as motorsport and hypermiling and/or for personal aesthetic acoustical preferences. Although the legality of altering a motor vehicle's OEM exhaust system varies by jurisdiction, in most developed parts of the world, modification of a vehicle's exhaust system is usually highly regulated if not strictly prohibited.

A muffler on a large diesel-powered truck

Trade-off between power increase and noise reduction

When the flow of exhaust gases from the engine to the atmosphere is obstructed to any degree, back pressure arises and the engine's efficiency, and therefore power, is reduced. Performance-oriented mufflers and exhaust systems thus strive to minimize back pressure by employing numerous technologies and methods to attenuate the sound. For the majority of such systems, however, the general rule of “more power, more noise”[2]​ applies. Several such exhaust systems that utilize various designs and construction methods:

  • Vector muffler - for larger diesel trucks, uses many concentric cones[cita requerida]
  • Spiral baffle muffler - for regular cars, uses a spiral-shaped baffle system[3]
  • Aero turbine muffler - creates partial vacuums at carefully spaced out time intervals to create negative back pressure, effectively ‘sucking’ the exhaust out of the combustion cylinders[4]

References

  1. «Exhaust Muffler For Engines Muffler Patent». Google. Consultado el 22 June 2014. 
  2. «Exhaust Theory». NSX Prime. Consultado el 22 June 2014. 
  3. «Spiral Turbo Specialties:». spiralturbobaffles.com. Spiral Turbo Specialties. Consultado el 22 June 2014. 
  4. «Aero Turbine Series Performance Exhaust Mufflers». pickupspecialties.com. Pickup Specialties. Consultado el 22 June 2014. 

External links

Plantilla:Partes automotrices