Is this pipe supposed to be flat?
Thanks,
Chris
Thanks,
Chris
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LOL, Sorry, I had just woke up. It was too early for humor to even occur to me. 
The difference is night & day, IMO, most noticeably when going over bumps or imperfections in the road. The car handles the contours of the road as one solid unit rather than flexing so much. Also, drastically reduced body flex going into corners/curves at speed. Not to mention the more solid feel to launching.This is the second set I've owned. I had them for 4 years on my WS6 and now I've got them on my Z28. The older units were powdercoated in gloss black and the new ones are a more heavy duty coating in a dull black. The new ones don't scratch as easy.
They are pretty heavy, but the extra bracing is worth it IMO. I use to have the standard 2-point weld in units on my old Formula and I didn't notice nearly as much improvement with those as with these SLP 3-point bolt-ins.
Simple install, sometimes you have to play with them to get all the bolt holes lined up though. I've never had them come loose or require any sort of re-tightening. What I did was use extra washers starting with a larger size than SLP provided (on the SFC mounting plate side) and worked down to a size just a tad larger than the bolt head (on the bolt side) making a pyramid that allowed for much tigher torquing of the bolts without the washers giving in. I was able to torque them enough using a massive breaker bar that the mounting plates actually compressed and matted to the contours of the car's subframe. Basically, they are one with the car.
This over-torquing meathod is ONLY for the front and rear mounting points though, do NOT try it with the center tunnel brace bolts, you will strip the stock threads easially. Only re-tighten the center brace bolts as tight as they were stock.Hope that helps.

Glad I could help.





