Those of you who "cleaned up" pacesetter ORY
the coated one. I used a flex-shaft tool but it's not a Dremel,
you can find ones that are unmotorized and have a 1/4"
chuck on a flexible shaft, that's it. You use a drill for the
power head and your choice of standard stones or burrs.
I chewed up a Forney cylinder stone in almost no time but
I had this old, crusty, flea market one with a coarse grit
and a good cement that ate the steel and didn't wear much
at all. Hard to know the quality of what you're buying.
Anyway the Jet-hot was a real reach-in and I put the flex
shaft handle & tail through a piece of Shop-Vac tube to get
the reach and leverage.
I spent at least two hours just to get the stick-in knocked
down to under 1/8". But I like the sound now, and figure I
killed the "rasp" people complain about on the Jet-Hot Y
uncatted (I have the cats but am saving them for later.
Much later.
). Out of the box the merge needs help sure. There is extra swag inside the merge that needs to be removed. I used a die grinder with grinding stones.
The Pacesetter actually has a merge though. The TSP, Jet Hot, Hooker all do not really have a merge. Those y pipes if you notice basicly just run the driver pipe into the side of the passenger pipe without directing the flow downsteam. The Pacesetter driver side pipe does make a turn before merging to the passenger pipe. Like I said, out of the box it needs help. If you clean up the merge its actually a good y pipe because it tucks better than any 3" y pipe.





