View Full Version : Removing catalytic converter
NDORFN
5th June 2009, 18:31
Anyone know what results this may have? It's a an EX250. Please, no comments on environmental impact etc... it's a bike, not a hummer.
YellowDog
5th June 2009, 18:47
You'll need to get it retuned for the new non-cat exhaust that you will have created. I am sure that $50 will more than cover it on a modern bike as you have. You may also need to change the airfilter to one that will pass air at a more rapid rate (maybe not).
It will probably give you a couple more HP, depending upon the retune.
NDORFN
5th June 2009, 18:52
I'm not after more power, just more noise! I'm used to riding quite a bit by sound on my old bike, especially down changes, and it's a bit tricky when you can barely hear it. Suppose removing the catalytic converter won't make a difference and leave me needing a re-jet?
jono035
5th June 2009, 19:08
I'd think that the lack of back-pressure from the cat would change the engine tuning so you'd need to be careful about what happens mixture wise, worth checking at least...
pritch
6th June 2009, 15:45
It would be more simple on a bike with a carburetor.
Otherwise it can be an expensive proposition: in my case a full exhaust system, Arrow or Termignoni, a free flow airfilter, and a new chip for the ECU. Might have to get used to the cat.
The sound is OK, I just don't like the look of the thing. Or where it is.
On any injected bike the minimum outlay would be a PowerCommander and a custom map. There goes about a grand...
NDORFN
6th June 2009, 15:49
It would be more simple on a bike with a carburetor.
Otherwise it can be an expensive proposition: in my case a full exhaust system, Arrow or Termignoni, a free flow airfilter, and a new chip for the ECU. Might have to get used to the cat.
The sound is OK, I just don't like the look of the thing. Or where it is.
On any injected bike the minimum outlay would be a PowerCommander and a custom map. There goes about a grand...
It is carbed. Funny thing about the new EX250 is that it's almost exactly the same engine as the old GPX250. Infact, the only significant difference is self-adjusting valves.
classic zed
6th June 2009, 20:02
Google is your friend, this might help.
http://www.car-techie.com/converter.php
jono035
11th June 2009, 18:44
That article covers an EFI car engine not a carburetted bike engine.
EFI engines have the ability to (while running in closed loop mode during idling/cruising/light acceleration) adjust to changes in the intake/exhaust system, but these may still cause issues in open-loop operation (cold running and full throttle) if the maps no longer keep your engine as rich as they should...
awa355
27th October 2009, 06:39
Have just picked up on your thread from some months ago. Did you do anything about removing the converter? I have a single cyl Honda 250 with the same problem. It is a carb model, I dont want more grunt, just a nicer exhaust tone.
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