JayTheCPA
Well-Known Member
I can rationalize a benefit from ceramic coating insides of exhaust parts as it lessens the gas’ contraction due to cooling (heat soak) and gives more spinning power to the turbo, but I am not connecting the dots on how coating the outside (OD) of the exhaust parts can give more than a small benefit where the most common notation is that it helps reduce the air temp that the engine breathes in the first place (presuming a WAI setup).
Am reading that the more popular coating shops prefer to *not* coat the inside (ID) of the pipes which leaves me with the question of where any true benefit occurs when the manifold and pipes have to then go through heat soaking. Or is it that coating just the outside provides benefit through limiting the heat soak by way of minimizing what radiates out to the atmosphere / engine bay?
Not looking to start a discussion of why any specific shop should change their philosophy of what they recommend / will ceramic coat, just want the physical merits of how ceramic coating just the outside of an exhaust system helps the turbo diesel in terms of noticeable gains.
Am reading that the more popular coating shops prefer to *not* coat the inside (ID) of the pipes which leaves me with the question of where any true benefit occurs when the manifold and pipes have to then go through heat soaking. Or is it that coating just the outside provides benefit through limiting the heat soak by way of minimizing what radiates out to the atmosphere / engine bay?
Not looking to start a discussion of why any specific shop should change their philosophy of what they recommend / will ceramic coat, just want the physical merits of how ceramic coating just the outside of an exhaust system helps the turbo diesel in terms of noticeable gains.