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smilie in place of the real @
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Back in the day I had a 1959 100/6 slash 3000. I sawed the stock muffler lengthwise on an aborted attempt to isolate the halves of the exhaust to make the exhaust note "sharper". Original muffler consisted of two louvered straight pipes surrounded by fibreglass. (Experiment failed). Bob
Maybe even better with a crossover pipe to connect the two exhausts on BJ8's?Wonder how it would have sounded with a separate muffler for each pipe? The six cylinder Healey was already a bit different by having a split manifold with two exhaust pipes which was a hot set-up for early 50s I6 American hot rods. But the American hot rods ran two glasspacks to the rear. Healey ran the two pipes back from the manifolds, but then combined them back into one muffler with dual inlets and outlets. Be interesting to hear one with true duals.
Maybe even better with a crossover pipe to connect the two exhausts on BJ8's?

My ANSA exhaust system has separate free-flow mufflers and piping but comes together in the resonator. The shared resonator has 2 inlets and 2 outlets so I don't know if it functions, or could function (given the distance from the engine), to balance the exhaust.
Ray (64BJ8P1)
I believe it was Smoky Yunik who came up with the idea of a crossover pipe to increase hp in his stockcar.Well Ray:
If we accept the concept that the balance pipe equalizes back pressure in the system your resonator may qualify.
However, I have no experience with that aftermarket exhaust system .
My Bell stainless system has a nice mellow note. As more carbon stuff get's into the muffler it will no longer have any of the stainless sound(I'm told}.The problem there is a crossover pipe would make the BJ8 even quieter. IMO BJ8s are already too quiet.