deven2015GT
Well-Known Member
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- #1
Good morning, S550 brothers and sisters!
Anyone who has seen me posting like a giddy child knows that I just had a Ford Racing by Borla Cat-Back Touring Exhaust installed on my Mustang. The first guy I took it to to install it said it didn't fit right and was 1.5" off. He ended up "having" to cut 1.5" off to make it "sit properly in the hangers". The following weekend it took it to the local muffler shop back home (originally took it a shop up here where I'm working at out of town) and he tightened what needed to be tightened and moved a clamp or two and fixed the tiny leak the first guy said would seal by driving (which was bs). So no leak, startup sounds great, and the exhaust sounds fantastic, B U T...
There is a harmonic resonance that comes around 2500-3500 rpms. It is not drone, I know this, but it is a musical type of sound. It is similar to rubbing your finger dipped in water around the lip of a wine glass.
I guess my questions are:
1. Has anyone else experienced a similar issue with aftermarket exhaust?
2. Could the 1.5" cut off have affected the way the exhaust system piping was tuned to cancel out harmonic resonance?
-AND finally...
3. Does anyone know of a solution to this or is it something I just have to live with?
I know I've read about adding weights to the muffler to help with the resonance, but I've also heard that could affect throttle response among other things. I'm just researching solutions and there isn't a whole lot of information on this that doesn't have to do with just the science of it (which honestly just seems logical to me - i.e. exhaust being pushed through the pipe creates some harmonic frequencies so in turn the exhaust pipes are shaped and tuned to send out the same frequencies created to cancel out the noise).
Thank you in advance for the input and God bless!
EDIT: I was told by a co-worker who claims to know a good bit about cars that that type of harmonic resonance is not a bad thing. It is merely the exhaust tuned to peak performance and thus the musical slight resonance at that certain rpm range (he says). Can anyone confirm this who has experience with this?
Anyone who has seen me posting like a giddy child knows that I just had a Ford Racing by Borla Cat-Back Touring Exhaust installed on my Mustang. The first guy I took it to to install it said it didn't fit right and was 1.5" off. He ended up "having" to cut 1.5" off to make it "sit properly in the hangers". The following weekend it took it to the local muffler shop back home (originally took it a shop up here where I'm working at out of town) and he tightened what needed to be tightened and moved a clamp or two and fixed the tiny leak the first guy said would seal by driving (which was bs). So no leak, startup sounds great, and the exhaust sounds fantastic, B U T...
There is a harmonic resonance that comes around 2500-3500 rpms. It is not drone, I know this, but it is a musical type of sound. It is similar to rubbing your finger dipped in water around the lip of a wine glass.
I guess my questions are:
1. Has anyone else experienced a similar issue with aftermarket exhaust?
2. Could the 1.5" cut off have affected the way the exhaust system piping was tuned to cancel out harmonic resonance?
-AND finally...
3. Does anyone know of a solution to this or is it something I just have to live with?
I know I've read about adding weights to the muffler to help with the resonance, but I've also heard that could affect throttle response among other things. I'm just researching solutions and there isn't a whole lot of information on this that doesn't have to do with just the science of it (which honestly just seems logical to me - i.e. exhaust being pushed through the pipe creates some harmonic frequencies so in turn the exhaust pipes are shaped and tuned to send out the same frequencies created to cancel out the noise).
Thank you in advance for the input and God bless!
EDIT: I was told by a co-worker who claims to know a good bit about cars that that type of harmonic resonance is not a bad thing. It is merely the exhaust tuned to peak performance and thus the musical slight resonance at that certain rpm range (he says). Can anyone confirm this who has experience with this?
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