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Thread: 240Z Headers

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Nov 2005
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    Mount Juliet, TN
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    Thumbs up

    I'm looking for companies that make headers for a square-port 240Z. I've seen what Motorsports Auto, Victoria British, PaceSetter, Arizona Z-Car, and Stahl have to offer. I even found some Nissan Comp headers. I'm hoping to find someone that makes stepped headers (1-1/2" at the flange, stepping up to 1-5/8", then 1-3/4", into 2-1/2" collector). Hooker and Hedman don't appear to have anything. Any suggestions?
    David Plott
    Atlanta Region #289721
    #54 1973 Datsun 240Z
    Mount Juliet, TN

  2. #2
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    Mar 2002
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    Black Rock, Ct
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    On this site, "Katman" and "joe harlan", (and sorry to others I didn't think of off the top of my head) are the experts in that area. Might want to PM them.
    Jake Gulick


    CarriageHouse Motorsports
    for sale: 2003 Audi A4 Quattro, clean, serviced, dark green, auto, sunroof, tan leather with 75K miles.
    IT-7 #57 RX-7 race car
    Porsche 1973 911E street/fun car
    BMW 2003 M3 cab, sun car.
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    New England Region
    lateapex911(at)gmail(dot)com


  3. #3
    Join Date
    Dec 2001
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    raleigh, nc, usa
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    One other place to check is Steve Parrish in the SEDiv. I believe his handle here is Parrish57. Sweet silver Z that sounds like no other one I have heard. He may have some contacts for his headers.
    NC Region
    1980 ITS Triumph TR8

  4. #4
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    Jan 2003
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    Rock Hill, SC USA
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    370

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    Shhhhhhh .... Lets not give away all of my secrets!

    David... Email me at [email protected]
    Steve Parrish
    57 ITS Nissan 300ZX

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Mar 2001
    Location
    Acworth, GA USA
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    How much money do you have to spend, and what is the rest of your engine program like?

    The closest thing commercially you'll get to what an ITS 240Z motor wants is a Stahl with 1-1/2 primaries. Tell Jere your application. You don't want steps up to 1-3/4, waay too big. Our ARRC's were won with a Tri-Y that had less than 1-3/8 ID primaries, 2 inch OD secondaries, and a single 2-1/2 final. 200+ SAE "East Coast" ponies. Most people have way too much header on their ITS cars (and way way too much on their street cars). Sunbelt's final ITS 240Z motors made 205-208 with a custom, stepped, Tri-Y header. About $1500 might get you one.

    There's more power to be had in dyno tuning than there is in headers. We tested them ALL, at least 12 that I can remember, and various combo's of exhaust pipe. We always made more horsepower in a day with the carbs and tuning than we did with headers. I guess my point is they should be one of the last things in your program (driver, suspension, engine, tuning) to sweat. But if you have Pacesetters, MSA, Hooker, AZC it's worth sweating- they're NFG for ITS.

    The next best thing to a Stahl that is *sorta* commercially available would be an old Clifford Research or BRE (was part of the "Whisper Power" system back in the 80's). Both are 1-1/2 primaries about 26 inch long but you'd be hard pressed to find one anymore. I did have the guy who actually builds NISMO's headers make one for a similar app to ITS- same exact header as the NISMO Comp but in 1-1/2 instead of 1-5/8. If pressed I could probably source one again.

    I'll have to PM Steve Parrish and see if he's barking up the same trees we did.
    katman

  6. #6
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    Oct 2004
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    Northeast
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    Now THAT was a freakin' informative post!!! Now if the KAT can find me a supply of inexpensive rust-free donors, I usher in a new era in ITS up here in the NE!!!
    Andy Bettencourt
    New England Region 188967

  7. #7
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    That was a good one.

    Kat, what do you think of the 260z at the new weight?
    NC Region
    1980 ITS Triumph TR8

  8. #8
    Join Date
    May 2005
    Location
    Greer, S.C.
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  9. #9
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    Mar 2001
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    Acworth, GA USA
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    Now if the KAT can find me a supply of inexpensive rust-free donors, I usher in a new era in ITS up here in the NE!!!
    [/b]
    Gee, I have one of those (rust free donor, '71) that needs a home....

    I haven't been paying attention- what's a 260Z weigh now? Things to think about before considering: The L26 was same bore as an L24 but with what eventually became the L28 crank. Torque will be more, but proly at a lower rpm. It's our experience that more useable rpm gives you the ability to gear numerically higher, which is a torque multiplier to the rear wheels- which almost always is faster and more useable than engine torque made lower. I like what 7400 rpm all day long does for us (well, once we figured out how to make the numerically higher diffs last). Doubt you could do that with an L28 crank and cast pistons, maybe with forged. If it was only 50 lbs difference I'd still bet on a 240Z. Yeah, we had a big time engine program but I'd attribute our success to chassis, and weight hurts.
    katman

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Jan 2003
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    Los Lunas, NM, USA
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    The new weights are 2430/2480/2505 for the 240/260/280 for a 50 and 75 lb weight delta over the 240.
    Ty Till
    #16 ITS
    Rocky Mountain Division
    2007 RMDiv ITS champion

  11. #11
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    raleigh, nc, usa
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    I believe it is 50 lbs more than a 240z.

    Our 260z revved pretty easily to 7000, but it is a car we bought from a guy in Atlanta and I have doubts about the legality of the cam in it.

    Nor do we even know how to get it down to 2480 or so. It weighs 2600 plus at this point, and that's with the small bumpers, reasonable fuel cell, aluminum drums, etc.
    NC Region
    1980 ITS Triumph TR8

  12. #12
    Join Date
    Jul 2004
    Location
    Raleigh NC
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    Yep, it is hard to tell with that 260z motor what we have. The car drove pretty well and was a lot of fun, well done cage, good bits, and a fresh engine. But that dang thing didn't do much of anything until 3200 RPM, and then it wanted to go to 7+ which I thought was uncharateristic of a 260z, or 240z for that matter. All I know is on the straights at VIR if you'd held the hammer down it'd keep pulling quite high in the RPM range, you had to force the shift for fear of something letting go.

    Then again, it might be the blasted flat top carbs. They are horribly rich at idle and low RPMs, could be the air fuel is finally getting right at the upper RPM range which makes it feel like some strange cam. It is fat and lazy below 3000 RPM.

    R

  13. #13
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    Feb 2003
    Location
    Orlando, Fl
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    Ok!!! I just learned more about my project in 10 minutes, than I have in the last 2 months!!!!
    Thanks!!!!
    Chris Leone
    318i going STL!!!
    E36 ITS underconstruction(sold)
    84 944 ITS (sold)
    71 240z more than half way there/now GT2 bound!!
    ChrisLeonemotorsports.com
    Roll cages and fabrication

  14. #14
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    Mar 2001
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    Acworth, GA USA
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    Oh, I forgot about those post '73 boat anchors they call carbs. Eddie Radatz at ERadatz Motorsports is the only guy I know that has ever made them work, but now reason why you shouldn't be able to idle AND race, even with those carbs. A lot of ITS Z folks run WAY too rich, which is why the cars won't run worth a crap below 3k. In the L24 we had trouble keeping them lean enough until about 6500, and then we had trouble getting them rich enough. Had to have custom needles and really monkey with the damper springs and fluids. No substitute for a week on the dyno with the right instrumentation.

    We came in second one year at the ARRC with 40 hp less than what Sunbelt eventually got out of the ITS L24 program (and people thought we were cheating at 165 hp!). Almost all of that difference was learning how to burn ALL the gas.
    katman

  15. #15
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    Does Eddie Radatz at ERadatz Motorsports have a website?

  16. #16
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    Eddie is, how do we say, Old School. He's in Marietta, GA at 770-926-6621.
    katman

  17. #17
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    K, amen on that air/fuel thing. Our Z is EXACTLY like that. So rich at idle that it barely runs, and then wakes up around 3-4k. Like Ron said, we used to think it was the cam coming on, but maybe it is the carbs just getting right.

    What is the difference between teh flattop and roundtop carb? Essentially the same CD design right? In looking through our documentation on the car, it looks like Mr. Radatz had a hand in our carbs, so maybe we got lucky.

    Air/fuel issues on a CD carb seem to me to be the secret to power. I put richer needles on the TR8 and it really woke up up high. Cured a high rpm miss, that scarily enough was probably from a very lean condition.

    The joys of working on ITS dinosaurs....
    NC Region
    1980 ITS Triumph TR8

  18. #18
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    May 2005
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    Greer, S.C.
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    Eddie is, how do we say, Old School. He's in Marietta, GA at 770-926-6621.
    [/b]
    Just checking..... I know he originally built my friend Greg Ira's EP 240Z which is still winning races. Greg set the track record last weekend at HPT first time there. Car has set track records at Sebring, Homestead, and VIR this season.

    Car sounds sweet.

    http://s19.photobucket.com/albums/b163/jma...straightVIR.flv



    Some pics I took at VIR this year. I can't wait for the Runoffs.






  19. #19
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    Mar 2001
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    Acworth, GA USA
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    Greg:

    What size tires are those? Ride height seems a little high for an EP car. Body roll seems a little excessive too. What springs? Does that car still have the ShockTeks? PM me, maybe we can go faster!
    katman

  20. #20
    Join Date
    Jan 2003
    Location
    Rock Hill, SC USA
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    The closest thing commercially you'll get to what an ITS 240Z motor wants is a Stahl with 1-1/2 primaries. Tell Jere your application. You don't want steps up to 1-3/4, waay too big. Our ARRC's were won with a Tri-Y that had less than 1-3/8 ID primaries, 2 inch OD secondaries, and a single 2-1/2 final. 200+ SAE "East Coast" ponies. Most people have way too much header on their ITS cars (and way way too much on their street cars). Sunbelt's final ITS 240Z motors made 205-208 with a custom, stepped, Tri-Y header. About $1500 might get you one.


    I'll have to PM Steve Parrish and see if he's barking up the same trees we did.
    [/b]
    Katman

    It sounds from your description like I found a header similar to the one you were using for the ARRC wins. When I switched from a step header with two 2 1/2 inch collectors to the single 2 1/2 it really picked the motor up. Keeping up the exhaust velocity seems crutial. Everyone at the track noticed right away because the sound of the car changed dramatically. I'm still turning about the same RPMs but it sounds like it's 1000+ RPM higher.

    Now if I can find out where to get the needles you ended up using then maybe I wouldn't have to bark up sooo many trees!

    Steve
    Steve Parrish
    57 ITS Nissan 300ZX

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