Toledo Man wrote:Mine still has the rear bracket from when it had the Rimmer's sports exhaust.
Steve, did you know that the club now stocks the Sprint standard exhaust in stainless? It isn't cheap at £499 but I'm sure it will be better than anything else available.
My Sprint Auto has a stainless replica of a standard system which was on it when I got it. I have no idea of its ancestry but its quite old and still nice and shiny and seems to fit well. The car has not been taxed since 95 so I guess its at least that old. So I don't need one personally but it does make the car seem like a bargain for the £375 I paid!
I was referring to the dearth of decent "sports" or free flowing systems now available, there used to be at least half a dozen choices, now it's down to Rimmers, DIY, or possibly something from Jigsaw, but I think that might only be a seldom available big bore downpipe (which doesn't fit too well by all accounts)
In their defence, I have to admit i'm pretty pleased with the Rimmers Sports system on the Carledo. I knew before I ordered it, that I was going to have to modify it somewhat to fit my short tail car and also anticipated problems marrying it to the mild steel Vauxhall downpipe. In the end I cut about 1" off the rear of the cross axle pipe and another 1.5" off the front of the rear box and re-slit the pipe for the join. Then 4-5" slash cut off the tail pipe and it was all good. I made (or modified) all original type mounts in the standard places and the downpipe turned out to be no bother at all fitting neatly inside the Rimmers centre section. My only problem here was that the downpipe exits directly under the chassis leg rather than inside it and there was not enough clearance for a U bolt clamp, so a heavy duty Jubilee clip and a small tack weld keep it together. It's been on there 2 years now and doesn't knock anywhere or have any nasty resonances that I can hear ( I am pretty deaf and the car is quite naturally noisy inside (from lack of sound insulation and addition of polybushing, not because of exhaust noise). Up to 4k rpm its relatively quiet and refined for cruising, 4-5k and it turns to a harder bark which becomes a satisfying howl from 5k to the redline (and limiter) at 6800. Aside from a slight tendency for the back box to twist and drop with time, which no amount of clamp tightening seems to fix, I've had no bother with it at all and the noise Gestapo at Castle Coombe were very impressed with it.
Steve