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(click on the underlined links to see enlarged
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Actually not a kool sounding
muffler but wait till you hear the gas mileage increase! I measured the
diameter of the pipe from the back of the CAT converter and end of the muffler
for my I6 engine. It's 2 1/4" out the CAT and 2" out the muffler. It
also has the center input and offset output. I ordered the 2 1/4" at both
ends
Dynomax Stainless Steel Super Turbo
muffler from
JC Whitney.
Even with that I still had to cut the front part of the
muffler away from the CAT with my air gun. |
Finally it came sliding off, there is about 4" of pipe at the end of the CAT. When you place the center part of the muffler on the CAT it will not slide in all the way as the inside parts of the muffler prevents it. You could cut off some of the end of the CAT but I didn't. |
I also added a S/S muffler strap from JC Whitney ($7) to connect 2 - 2" OD (0utside diameter) pipes together. I just in case I sell the car, I'll put back the old muffler. This muffler strap would allow that. I found a 2 1/4 muffler adapter with the other end a 2" OD. I happen to have a 2 1/4 OD pipe so I cut this pipe to fit inside the muffler and the adapter pipe. |
Two spare muffler clamps held them in place. I used this S/S strap to reattach the tail pipe and adapter. These adapters are steel parts, not S/S, so some 4 years from now they may rust out. The S/S strap worked fine (no leaks) but they would not support the weight of this large muffler. The strap flexed a bit as the welded S/S tail assembly only has one hanger at the rear. No other support for the muffler/CAT existed. I added a $1 muffler hanger from PEP BOYS, an exposed bolt right under the muffler would support the strap. I bent the hanger strap, below the second hole, at the top. | |
|
I fit the hanger clamp between the two muffler clamps. Now the muffler was not flexing the S/S strap. The tailpipe is up a bit in the rear but I haven't heard it hitting. I started the car expecting a loud rumble, worse than my '86 Fiero, but that car sounded pretty cool. Nothing.... nope... the I6 engine sounded as it has the standard muffler on it. My van sounded louder that this straight through muffler. |
Driving with just myself in the car I noticed these
differences:
* Gas mileage from my computer
showed mileage was better.
* Highways.. cruse set for 60
mph , straight driving, no hills or declines it would display 25 mpg.
* On steep hill declines, with
cruse, the mileage jumped to 59 mpg.. It never went above 45 mpg
before.
* When in cruse and you tapped
the brake to slow, you would feel the car jerk to slow. Now
you
wouldn't' feel the car jerk to decelerate. Now it would just slow down.
* Driving in town where the
computer use to read 14 mpg was now showing 17 at 40 mph.
* Up my steep hills the gauge
use to show 14 mpg, now it's 16/17 mpg.
My gas gauge also showed improvement. My usual 35 mile trip to work use to take a bit less then 1/8 of a tank. Now it used less then that and the weather was colder. I drive the same stretch 5 days a week, no bumper to bumper traffic. I can only state what the gas gauge does and computer shows. I have owned 4 Chrysler cars with these computers and they are deadly accurate. They show instant (adjusts every two seconds) and current average since a reset. A gas station is a mile from the entrance ramp to the highway home. I can get gas, reset the computer, make it through the one traffic light and cruse on the highway and have it show a 21 mpg average 30 miles later just before I turn off. My normal 4 day trip would show an average of 19.4 mpg (mostly highway). I even get cheap-o gas. This station (Denco) is 6 to 10 cents cheaper then brand names. On 1-16-'98 I'm paying $.99 a gallon. Last summer they were are $.96 for a number of weeks.