Sedan Chat Thread
#9331
Registered Member
iTrader: (3)
I'm running resonated test pipes to my Invidia Q300 and things are still a bit too quiet for me. Any of you fellas got a suggestion to add a little more noise without introducing a whole lot of drone? I'd like to keep my Invidia mufflers because of the look. I'm thinking of deleting the resonators, or adding in shorter resonators.
Disconnect mufflers and slip washers in between the flanges and reconnect. Introduce more noise and keep the mufflers
#9334
Administrator
iTrader: (9)
#9335
Pyroclastic Flow
iTrader: (12)
That's like the ones I had on my boat.
It's called Captain's Call. With the flick of a switch you can route the exhaust through the outdrive into the water for quiet operation. Otherwise it goes out the back completely unhindered through the dual 4" straight pipes of a 454 Mag with headers.
It was great for scaring sailboaters. LOL.
Sean
It's called Captain's Call. With the flick of a switch you can route the exhaust through the outdrive into the water for quiet operation. Otherwise it goes out the back completely unhindered through the dual 4" straight pipes of a 454 Mag with headers.
It was great for scaring sailboaters. LOL.
Sean
#9338
Administrator
iTrader: (9)
People who bought the Tanabe Medallion axle-back for their OEM exhaust, they should consider this washer-mod.
Or doesn't that actually work with those components? Isn't the axle-back a sleeve, not a flange? Hmm.
#9339
Registered Member
iTrader: (8)
Actually i tried running no mufflers just to see how it sounds, and yeah it does sound good.
And @ rochester i do have the Tanabe, and yep.. it's a sleeve type thing, so you can't put a washer. if that mod worked i'd maybe do it, i just don't want any drone. I drive 100 highway miles currently everyday so that would suck.
And @ rochester i do have the Tanabe, and yep.. it's a sleeve type thing, so you can't put a washer. if that mod worked i'd maybe do it, i just don't want any drone. I drive 100 highway miles currently everyday so that would suck.
#9340
Registered Member
iTrader: (4)
Muffler deletes are more accepted with coupes than sedans. Hell, they make pre-made muffler deletes you can buy to bolt up. I'd be willing to bet if a company like Top Speed or AAM made muffler deletes for our cars under $200, they would be very popular. If anyone posts about muffler deletes in any of the groups I frequent on FB, they usually will get drowned in people bashing them.
One thing I am curious about though with a washer at the axle-back..will it create any degradation in performance? With partial amount of exhaust gases escaping at the leak, there would be a possibility in my mind.
One thing I am curious about though with a washer at the axle-back..will it create any degradation in performance? With partial amount of exhaust gases escaping at the leak, there would be a possibility in my mind.
#9342
Administrator
iTrader: (9)
I wouldn't recommend this, but at the same time I don't bash it. You have to really want the noise.
#9343
Premier Member
iTrader: (5)
Yeah, even the FI exhaust was too loud for me. I've been through countless exhaust combinations on this car and still haven't found the perfect one yet. I guess I'm just a wuss when it comes noisy exhausts! Right now I'm gonna stick with my Tanabe axle back, with Tanabe Y-Pipe and OEM CATs, but might try another FI exhaust again in the future. This time with the larger resonators and OEM CATs...
Some good flux, patience and a wire clamp lol. Then heat shrink and purty wires are done I heat the stripped wire with a small torch too (kind of like when you solder copper water pipes)
Leftover skills from my past. I got into university for robotics and electrical engineering, and ended up going to university for art and design, following my passion. Best decision I have ever made. Now the skills come in handy from time to time
Leftover skills from my past. I got into university for robotics and electrical engineering, and ended up going to university for art and design, following my passion. Best decision I have ever made. Now the skills come in handy from time to time
Good for you for following your passion. I went to school for ME and Business Admin. and wanted to be an automotive suspension design Engineer, but now I find myself owning my own company selling industrial valves... It's a good living, but definitely not my passion.
EE skills can definitely come in handy. I took enough EE classes in college to make me comfortable doing all my own electrical projects around the house and in the garage. I even built several different moving, semi-robotic Halloween decorations for a haunted house we build every year since my wife is a Halloween freak. So you'll find the uses for those types of skills can be endless. Speaking of which, I still need to have you do a few mock-ups of front headlight designs for me if the offer still stands.
#9344
Registered Member
iTrader: (3)
Muffler deletes are more accepted with coupes than sedans. Hell, they make pre-made muffler deletes you can buy to bolt up. I'd be willing to bet if a company like Top Speed or AAM made muffler deletes for our cars under $200, they would be very popular. If anyone posts about muffler deletes in any of the groups I frequent on FB, they usually will get drowned in people bashing them.
One thing I am curious about though with a washer at the axle-back..will it create any degradation in performance? With partial amount of exhaust gases escaping at the leak, there would be a possibility in my mind.
One thing I am curious about though with a washer at the axle-back..will it create any degradation in performance? With partial amount of exhaust gases escaping at the leak, there would be a possibility in my mind.
I can't see a performance degradation, but someone with a phd in fluid dynamics will probably be along shortly to school me
I previously had a 4th generation Firebird with a Borla cat back. Where the pipe ran over the rear axle was a split, with 4 different sized block off plates, allowing everything from a full dump to all exhaust routing through the muffler. The driver side tips were from the muffler, the passenger side from the block off plates. I don't see how this is really any different. Most of the exhaust still runs through the mufflers.