Gary,
I had a moment to do a bit of research, and it only reinforces my view that you likely aren't going to get much gain for all your trouble.
The website
is a *wonderful* resource for all things related to engines. They walk through header theory at
. Note, however, that every application cited is a high RPM race engine that flows a *lot* of air, does not employ a catalytic converter or muffler, and certainly doesn't use Exhaust Gas Recirculation (EGR) to limit emissions of NOx.
The article at
does a pretty good job of explaining how pipe length, diameter, and collector design shift the torque peak around. They even go a bit into how one can shift peaks from different tubes to get a small gain over a wider RPM range. The article very specifically brings up the purpose of the headers, scavenging, and mentions that catalytic converters and mufflers will have the expected detrimental result. The article *doesn't* mention that modern cars can *never* attain anything close to ideal scavenging as the intake charge is *intentionally* corrupted with exhaust via EGR to aid in reducing combustion temperature and NOx.
Finally, there are some free calculators at
, and what appears to be some moderately comprehensive software for $75 at
. As the epi-eng article notes, however, professionals use much more complex CFD/thermal analysis to design their exhaust systems, so I can't say whether these calculators are really worth much effort.
I have always been highly skeptical of headers on a comparatively stock engine with EGR, catalytic converters, and mufflers; there's a lot of money being made selling headers into street legal cars (read emission compliant with mufflers), so I suspect few want to mention it. If you must proceed, I hope you find the references above to be useful.
Rod