ceramic coat short headers or manifolds???
#1
What would you do?
I have a STS kit. Right now I have Gibbson shorty stainless steel headers on my truck. Should have them ceramic coated? Should I put back on the stock manifolds? Or should I have the stock manifolds ceramic coated and put back on? Its going to cost $180 to $220 to have them coated. They will put two or three coats on the outside for a maximum thickness of .012. Do you think I will gain much having the coated for the $200?
I also am going to rap and paint my exhaust pipes back to the turbo.
I have a STS kit. Right now I have Gibbson shorty stainless steel headers on my truck. Should have them ceramic coated? Should I put back on the stock manifolds? Or should I have the stock manifolds ceramic coated and put back on? Its going to cost $180 to $220 to have them coated. They will put two or three coats on the outside for a maximum thickness of .012. Do you think I will gain much having the coated for the $200?
I also am going to rap and paint my exhaust pipes back to the turbo.
Last edited by blue 01; Aug 24, 2006 at 11:02 AM.
#3
The Gibson shorties may flow slightly better than ther stock cast iron, but even coated they may not hold heat as well.
Holding heat in your exhaust pipes helps flow of the exhaust, you should notice that once your turbo is warmed up it builds boost quicker, don't confuse this with getting your turbo and your engine really hot, just up to operating temerature.
This is true for your exhaust as well. Cold manifolds and pipes pull the intial heat from warm up away from the turbo making it take a little longer to warm the system. The coating will help but the heat tape will probably do more.
The last thing is that I have had the STS ceramic coating peel up from the piping when it was wraped.
It must hold condensation if you don't get the exhaust hot enough to evaporate it, so beware of the coating issues too.
Holding heat in your exhaust pipes helps flow of the exhaust, you should notice that once your turbo is warmed up it builds boost quicker, don't confuse this with getting your turbo and your engine really hot, just up to operating temerature.
This is true for your exhaust as well. Cold manifolds and pipes pull the intial heat from warm up away from the turbo making it take a little longer to warm the system. The coating will help but the heat tape will probably do more.
The last thing is that I have had the STS ceramic coating peel up from the piping when it was wraped.
It must hold condensation if you don't get the exhaust hot enough to evaporate it, so beware of the coating issues too.
#4
I'd run the stock manifolds, I don't think the gain with the coating would be worth the cost. Stockers work great on my truck, But I'd recommend the header wrap from manifolds back.
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#9
Dam thats a great ideal. Those look great. It look like you had the inside coated to. Isn't that a little dangerous if it flakes off and the turbo sucks it up? Is that ceramic coating?
Looks like you just made more work for me to do.
Looks like you just made more work for me to do.
#10
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TG02Z71, I just ground off where it was black from the exhaust. There was quite a bit on top and bottom, but not much on the sides.
Blue 01, it is ceramic coating. Souldnt have any issues with it coming off. These are double coated also.
Blue 01, it is ceramic coating. Souldnt have any issues with it coming off. These are double coated also.



To me, its the best solution.