Particularly interested in what @tntsuperjet has to say if he'd be kind enough to offer some insight.
But there are other very knowledgeable folks here that maybe can comment.
Fairly basic conventional wisdom is that dry pipe has higher internal gas temperature so higher speed of sound, for any given physical length the "tuned lenght" is effectively shorter so has a higher tuned rpm, wet pipe cooler, lower speed of sound, lower rpm.
It seems like it would be completely possible to have a wet pipe of very short physical length and a dry pipe of long physical length so their effective tuned rpm would be the same.
But, people still go through the difficulty, weight, expense of making dry pipes, even oem's. So there must be some inherent advantage.
Why? What is it? Something about the water damping the pressure waves so the wet pipe is less effective, or...something?
But there are other very knowledgeable folks here that maybe can comment.
Fairly basic conventional wisdom is that dry pipe has higher internal gas temperature so higher speed of sound, for any given physical length the "tuned lenght" is effectively shorter so has a higher tuned rpm, wet pipe cooler, lower speed of sound, lower rpm.
It seems like it would be completely possible to have a wet pipe of very short physical length and a dry pipe of long physical length so their effective tuned rpm would be the same.
But, people still go through the difficulty, weight, expense of making dry pipes, even oem's. So there must be some inherent advantage.
Why? What is it? Something about the water damping the pressure waves so the wet pipe is less effective, or...something?