Exhaust mounts.
Posted: 21 Aug 2012, 14:03
Firstly, I'd like to just quickly say hello and introduce myself and my van. I used to be a member on here years ago but lost my username after years of inactivity. My syncro was put into storage (really badly) and only recently got back on the road. There's a lot of work needing doing on it (Simon from Brickwerks said he'd never needed 3 pages doing a write-up before!) but its a good old van and worth the effort it's gonna take to sort it out. It's a factory hi-top that has old triple-holes where you'd expect to have beacons on the roof and there's a disconnected siren behind the headlight grillle. (Any ideas? I'm guessing airport ambulance or something)
Anyway, I'm sure you'll be seeing plenty of questions from me in the future.
At the moment I'm trying to sort my exhaust. I've had to change the rubber mounts before and at one point the triangular "rip-plate" (the triangular-ish one that attatches to the back of the sump) actually snapped in two. I had it welded and replaced the rubbers. Eventually the rubbers split again and this time the exhaust pipe snapped at the manifold end and was dragging behind me. I replaced the whole exhaust and mounts but found I had to push the muffler box down and forwards to get the rubbers to locate in the mounting plates. In other words the exhaust "wants" to be slightly higher than it is when bolted on, and there is a constant strain on the rubbers. I've just bought a new rip plate from Futbus and am going to have about 30mm welded onto the end of it so the new holes locate on the bolts without being under pressure.
My question is, is doing this advisable or is there something else I can do to reposition the exhuast so it sits right on the mounts?
Thanks, Bob
Anyway, I'm sure you'll be seeing plenty of questions from me in the future.
At the moment I'm trying to sort my exhaust. I've had to change the rubber mounts before and at one point the triangular "rip-plate" (the triangular-ish one that attatches to the back of the sump) actually snapped in two. I had it welded and replaced the rubbers. Eventually the rubbers split again and this time the exhaust pipe snapped at the manifold end and was dragging behind me. I replaced the whole exhaust and mounts but found I had to push the muffler box down and forwards to get the rubbers to locate in the mounting plates. In other words the exhaust "wants" to be slightly higher than it is when bolted on, and there is a constant strain on the rubbers. I've just bought a new rip plate from Futbus and am going to have about 30mm welded onto the end of it so the new holes locate on the bolts without being under pressure.
My question is, is doing this advisable or is there something else I can do to reposition the exhuast so it sits right on the mounts?
Thanks, Bob