Canadian mufflers.
Posted: Sat Nov 08, 2025 1:41 am
I have just finished assembling 3 mufflers to take to next weekend's Bendigo Swap meet.
The ends are metal spinning. The brackets and deflectors are laser cut duplicates of originals.
The centre pipe is standard T exhaust pipe, but the first two inches is expanded so the original pipe will slide into it. This creates a shoulder, up to which the front end spinning wedges.
I was given the stainless steel sheet from which the inner baffle and the outer shell were rolled. A mate runs a heating/cooling business and rolled the shells for me, with the correct double fold seams.
It seems a pity to paint them but making the ends in stainless is not on my agenda. Allan from down under.
The ends are metal spinning. The brackets and deflectors are laser cut duplicates of originals.
The centre pipe is standard T exhaust pipe, but the first two inches is expanded so the original pipe will slide into it. This creates a shoulder, up to which the front end spinning wedges.
I was given the stainless steel sheet from which the inner baffle and the outer shell were rolled. A mate runs a heating/cooling business and rolled the shells for me, with the correct double fold seams.
It seems a pity to paint them but making the ends in stainless is not on my agenda. Allan from down under.