Can a flowmaster be reversed?
#1
Staging Lane
Thread Starter
Can a flowmaster be reversed?
I know that it clearly states inlet and outlet...
But I got a 40 series Deltaflow with a 3" center inlet and dual 2.5" outlets which would substantially clean my installation if I were to use the pipes coming off the manifolds into the oulets and then a single 3" pipe running south.
I would like to do this rather than using a "Y" pipe and then into the muffler.
How much power would I lose if any?
This is going underneath my '69 C-10 with a stock 4.8 meant for efficiency and economy with only a "Superchips style" tune.
Just thinking as I do not want to buy another muffler, call me cheap, but I call it using what I have at hand.
Thanks for your advice.
But I got a 40 series Deltaflow with a 3" center inlet and dual 2.5" outlets which would substantially clean my installation if I were to use the pipes coming off the manifolds into the oulets and then a single 3" pipe running south.
I would like to do this rather than using a "Y" pipe and then into the muffler.
How much power would I lose if any?
This is going underneath my '69 C-10 with a stock 4.8 meant for efficiency and economy with only a "Superchips style" tune.
Just thinking as I do not want to buy another muffler, call me cheap, but I call it using what I have at hand.
Thanks for your advice.
#2
TECH Addict
iTrader: (2)
Flowmasters work on the sound cancellation theory, not the absorption theory so in a word - no.
By reversing the muffler all the baffles would be facing the wrong way and it would be very restrictive. Would it physically work - yes, but if fuel economy and even a remote bit of performance is what you are looking for I would say spend the $90 and get one that fits your application. You could even sell the one you have to someone that could use it to offset your cost.
By reversing the muffler all the baffles would be facing the wrong way and it would be very restrictive. Would it physically work - yes, but if fuel economy and even a remote bit of performance is what you are looking for I would say spend the $90 and get one that fits your application. You could even sell the one you have to someone that could use it to offset your cost.
#3
TECH Enthusiast
As said before, no you cannot do that with baffled or chambered muffs.
Get rid of the flowmasters or sell them as they will be loud and restrictive. They are known as "dronemasters".
Get you a straight through design muff with no restriction in the path way of the exhaust:
Hooker Maxflows $69
Hooker Aerochambers $74
Dynomax Ultras $74
Magnaflow $80
So between $140-$160 a pair.
Sell the dronemasters for $100-$120
and you would have paid $40-$60 for a better performing muffler.
This is an area I would not be super cheap on but $69-$80 is very cheap for a muff besides a Oreilly or Autozone Thrush muff....lol
Bozz
Get rid of the flowmasters or sell them as they will be loud and restrictive. They are known as "dronemasters".
Get you a straight through design muff with no restriction in the path way of the exhaust:
Hooker Maxflows $69
Hooker Aerochambers $74
Dynomax Ultras $74
Magnaflow $80
So between $140-$160 a pair.
Sell the dronemasters for $100-$120
and you would have paid $40-$60 for a better performing muffler.
This is an area I would not be super cheap on but $69-$80 is very cheap for a muff besides a Oreilly or Autozone Thrush muff....lol
Bozz
#4
I have a new in the box Edlebrock 2.5 in dual inlet and single 3" outlet that I would be willing to sell at a loss if you are interested.
Drop me a PM if you are interested and I will send you the specifics. The exhaust shop ended up selling me a shorter unit and I never returned this one.
Drop me a PM if you are interested and I will send you the specifics. The exhaust shop ended up selling me a shorter unit and I never returned this one.