14" Magnaflow or Flowmaster Super 10???
#1
14" Magnaflow or Flowmaster Super 10???
i have a '10 Screw Lariat and im looking for an exhaust upgrade. from what ive seen, there is not much gains in performance with an exhaust upgrade. due to this, im leaning towards just replacing the oem muffler with an aftermarket one and just add stainless exhaust tips. i would like a loud, deep tone but dont want overwhelming drone in the cab (dont mind if there is some as long as its not unbareable). which muffler would you guys recommend? also, if im wrong about cat-back exhausts not being worth the extra money, please post reasons to go with a full cat-back system rather than just a muffler replacement. thank you.
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i have a '10 Screw Lariat and im looking for an exhaust upgrade. from what ive seen, there is not much gains in performance with an exhaust upgrade. due to this, im leaning towards just replacing the oem muffler with an aftermarket one and just add stainless exhaust tips. i would like a loud, deep tone but dont want overwhelming drone in the cab (dont mind if there is some as long as its not unbareable). which muffler would you guys recommend? also, if im wrong about cat-back exhausts not being worth the extra money, please post reasons to go with a full cat-back system rather than just a muffler replacement. thank you.
there is no performance gain with a cat back swap at the minimal power levels 99% of the people on this forum at at...
I agree if you want a lil' more sound and want to do it cheaply then go have the muffler shop install the muffler of your choice in the stock pipe but I would have them install it so the muffler is under the bed and not under the cab
there's a lot of mganflow humpers on here to you're going to start hearing responses about how you need to install the magnaflow BUT remember it's your truck, you have to listen to it as non one else on here has to drive it so listen to the sound clips carefully and choose wisely on one you'll be happy with
#6
I currently have a flowmaster 44, under my bed, and I have enough drone that I have to turn my stereo up. of course the cab in my 90 doesn't have the "sound proofing" that the newer trucks have. I do have a guy that I work with that has a FM super 10 and rear cats deleted on his 03 5.4 and its insanely loud with plenty of drone to boot. I would opt for the magnaflow under the bed like tarajerame suggested.
#7
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#8
there's a lot of mganflow humpers on here to you're going to start hearing responses about how you need to install the magnaflow BUT remember it's your truck, you have to listen to it as non one else on here has to drive it so listen to the sound clips carefully and choose wisely on one you'll be happy with
OP - fyi:
In the realm of an otherwise fairly stock truck (i.e. no supercharger, big cams, super custom tune, etc) I don't think you could tell much difference between true duals and a 3-inch single.
In fact, I did some dyno-testing on my '05 F-150HD, stock pipes with a 2.5-inch straight thru muffler added vs a full 3-inch cat back. The muffler change gave 3/4 the performance gain of the full system for about a third the cost. Stick a nice tip on the stock tailpipe for window dressing and you get a great performance/dollar ratio.I was also involved in testing a full header and true dual system vs a cat back (on a GM truck) and we didn't see a gigantic difference between them (except in the cost) with the otherwise stock truck.
Where the dual and x-pipe, or even the 3-inch single, comes in is when you do other mods that increase the VE to the point where you need a lot more exhaust flow. When that happens, it's not so much as gaining from the exhaust mods, it's not losing what you gain by having a restrictive exhaust.
There are some tuning tips to exhaust size and generally, bigger is better for high rpm work but worse for torque down low. You gotta pick your poison. For everyday, a smaller diameter system with no chokes (poor blending, kinks etc) will allow for good torque and economy... with a small cost at the upper end. Everyday low and mid range torque and economy are my two goals. The only time my truck sees high rpms is on the dyno.
I don't think dual or single matters much if the sizing is right, but an X or H pipe is vital to duals.
After my fooling around on the dyno and some calculations (you can calculate exhaust flow in CFM), I'd have long tube headers, free flow cats with 1.5 inch tubes going into 2 inch pipes with mandrel bends, into a good Y, into a mandrel bent 2.5 inch single system with a large chamber straight thru muffler.
In fact, I did some dyno-testing on my '05 F-150HD, stock pipes with a 2.5-inch straight thru muffler added vs a full 3-inch cat back. The muffler change gave 3/4 the performance gain of the full system for about a third the cost. Stick a nice tip on the stock tailpipe for window dressing and you get a great performance/dollar ratio.I was also involved in testing a full header and true dual system vs a cat back (on a GM truck) and we didn't see a gigantic difference between them (except in the cost) with the otherwise stock truck.
Where the dual and x-pipe, or even the 3-inch single, comes in is when you do other mods that increase the VE to the point where you need a lot more exhaust flow. When that happens, it's not so much as gaining from the exhaust mods, it's not losing what you gain by having a restrictive exhaust.
There are some tuning tips to exhaust size and generally, bigger is better for high rpm work but worse for torque down low. You gotta pick your poison. For everyday, a smaller diameter system with no chokes (poor blending, kinks etc) will allow for good torque and economy... with a small cost at the upper end. Everyday low and mid range torque and economy are my two goals. The only time my truck sees high rpms is on the dyno.
I don't think dual or single matters much if the sizing is right, but an X or H pipe is vital to duals.
After my fooling around on the dyno and some calculations (you can calculate exhaust flow in CFM), I'd have long tube headers, free flow cats with 1.5 inch tubes going into 2 inch pipes with mandrel bends, into a good Y, into a mandrel bent 2.5 inch single system with a large chamber straight thru muffler.
MGD
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thanks for the replies so far!
i really like the sound of borla exhausts but i need where i can do dual pipes exiting straight back. im considering doing a side exit but right now im leaning towards rear exit. also, what exhaust tips would you guys recommend? i know there are hundreds but im just looking for suggestions.
i think the flowmaster might be too much, so im leaning towards the magnaflow 14" or one of the borla's.
i really like the sound of borla exhausts but i need where i can do dual pipes exiting straight back. im considering doing a side exit but right now im leaning towards rear exit. also, what exhaust tips would you guys recommend? i know there are hundreds but im just looking for suggestions.
i think the flowmaster might be too much, so im leaning towards the magnaflow 14" or one of the borla's.
#15
^ The Borla pro xs is also a 14" muffler very similar to the magnflow. The difference is a little more of a "tuned" sound. The magnaflow will get a raspy sound in the high RPM range under heavy throttle, where as the Borla will not. The Borla muffler will maintain that deep smooth growl all the way up. Check out my videos.