Swap I Finally have some time to give you a proper response.
swamp2 wrote: ↑Mon Feb 10, 2020 7:03 pm
That one actually sounds pretty decent. The first one from the facebook post was pretty harsh and brappy but the one Olbilford posted was much less so, tone was pleasant and didn't seem unbearably loud.
Facebook's bike was falling on it's face whenever he canned it, my guess it the bike was cold. Does that effect the sound? I don't know.
swamp2 wrote: ↑Mon Feb 10, 2020 7:03 pm
At the risk of turning this into another science experiment (hey, I'm a retired engineer...), if it's a straight through pipe, albeit with some packing, is that such a good idea? I was under the impression these bikes liked to have some back pressure for better exhaust scavenging and torque. I know from experience straight through pipes on a Harley are a piss poor idea, maybe help a little high end but not so good for normal riding. Does the existence of the packing somehow provide the desired back pressure?
Anyone you ask will tell you back pressure is a good thing. But I can also tell you there are a lot of people running Shorty Megaphones and Cocktail Shakers. I am 100% certain those setups offer no back pressure. Can you run them, yes. Is it "good" for the bike, probably not. As a point of reference, the yard sale pipe in question is probably twice the length of a shorty.
swamp2 wrote: ↑Mon Feb 10, 2020 7:03 pm
Tim, I see it looks like the back section is removable (for repacking, I presume). I'm not a fan of the Globe nameplate which appears to be riveted on - if I picked this up I'd drill them out but it would leave a couple holes, obviously. Is the spacing of the screws on that back section such that it could be rotated so the holes wouldn't be so apparent?
You won't be able rotate it enough to make the rivets Invisible. I can measure the spacing, it might be the correct width for a Royal Enfield timing cover badge.