Results 1 to 11 of 11

Thread: How much muffler is generally needed?

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Oct 2002
    Location
    Ballston Spa NY
    Posts
    20

    Default How much muffler is generally needed?

    I am planning on going straight from the header about 4 feet then a 45 degree bend and having a supertrapp exiting behind the passenger area in front of the rear fender...

    Y
    | -Poor rendition
    |
    _

    Would this be enough sound deadening, or do most you run glasspacks in addition to a regular muffler?

  2. #2
    Join Date
    May 2001
    Location
    IT.com "First Loser" Greensboro, NC USA
    Posts
    8,607

    Default

    I am NOT a supertrapp fan for a lot of reasons. The only thing they have on their side is light weight and easy installation. I don't know how many disks you'd need to run to get a VW legal now but I'd go with a good quality baffled box muffler instead (like a Walker or something).

    K

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Apr 2001
    Location
    Belmont, CA USA
    Posts
    1,098

    Default

    I run a cherry bomb glass pack, attached to about 12" of flex pipe, and a 45 degree down pipe that exits right in front of the rear axle.

    It's worked for me, and we have VERY restrictive sound requirements for Laguna Seca.



    ------------------
    Tim Linerud
    San Francisco Region SCCA
    #95 GP Wabbit
    http://linerud.myvnc.com/racing/index.html

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Jan 2001
    Location
    Buffalo, New York
    Posts
    2,942

    Default

    I used supertrapp end plate only for years. K is right--quite the royal pain chasing the correct number of plates and unless you take them apart and clean them (yes clean them)regularly, you'll have lots of back pressure.

    They are good as flame suppressors.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    May 2002
    Posts
    61

    Default

    Try it first without a muffler.
    I ran a 2300 Pinto with a straight pipe ending in a downturn in front of the rear axle. I think it ran about 98db.
    I intend to do the same thing on the Jetta

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Feb 2004
    Location
    st. louis mo.
    Posts
    433

    Default

    Make sure it goes past the driver....I got a lecture about my previous system.. mike g.

  7. #7
    Dick Elliott Guest

    Default

    REX!
    Still have that pipe on my new Pinto! 98 db inside the car, thats for sure. Has your welding improved? Jetta? Tell me more. What happen to the RX-7? DICK
    mjelliott@cox-internet. com


    Originally posted by Rex B:
    Try it first without a muffler.
    I ran a 2300 Pinto with a straight pipe ending in a downturn in front of the rear axle. I think it ran about 98db.
    I intend to do the same thing on the Jetta

  8. #8
    Dick Elliott Guest

    Default

    If you must run a muffler, get a Lowback spiral muffler from Moroso. Use a 3" in and out reguardless of your down pipe size. Just expand the pipe at the muffler to fit. This way it will be low back pressure and quiet too. These mufflers will out last the car and are cheap too. Muffler should be the last item in the exhaust system. Back by the back bumper is the best place. If you place the muffler under the car, with a long tail pipe, the exhaust has time to speed back up and get loud again. Total length is found by where you want the power to come in at. Short for top end / long for low end.

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Feb 2001
    Location
    centerville, MN, US of A
    Posts
    135

    Default

    about 3' of pipe and a 12" glass pack with turndown under my car gets me to about 92 db on an 86 Scirocco. No muffler was 99 to 102 db.

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Jan 2001
    Location
    Flagtown, NJ USA
    Posts
    6,335

    Default

    I ran a straight pipe on my old ITB car, and run one on my HP Rabbit. I'm usually 99-100db w/ the Prod car, and was pretty much the same w/ the ITB car.

    ------------------
    MARRS #25 ITB Rabbit GTI (sold) | MARRS #25 HProd Rabbit
    SCCA 279608

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Jan 2002
    Location
    Somewhere in Upstate New York
    Posts
    1,033

    Default

    Straight pipe, following the original path, exiting in the stock location in the rear thru a 'turn-down'. No muffler, no resonator. Never ever had a sound problem, and when I've checked, it's always been under 100dB...probably closer to 97-98dB.

    If it exits in the rear, the driver doesn't need ear plugs, and won't get a headache.

Bookmarks

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •