I have had some temporary exhaust made up to be able to start it up in the shop for a while now, but I still wanted to build a complete high clearance setup to get rid of the factory manifold to O2 sensor piece. I started with a couple J bends from Summit and some extra tube as well as the mufler I bought a few months back that was on my temp exhaust.
Here is a picture of the stainless heat shield that I added to the muffler. After all, it is almost touching the floor.
Here you can see 2/3 of the exhaust after being fully welded. It looks really clean. I was able to add a flange on each side of the mufler to make it easily replaceable without having to redo the whole system.
I ended up using the stock collectors mostly because I had them, but I could've easily bought some at the muffler shop.
The tailpipe with a sweet turndown.
I routed the diver side pipe in front of the oil pan up out of the way. The passenger pipe joins in on the other side and increases to 2.5" pipe. You can see that the J bends make it very easy to route your pipes wherever you want and they make for a clean finished look. I may add some heat wrap or shielding around the oil pan if it ends up being a problem, but there is still a good ammount of space between the pipes and the pan. It will probably be fine as the factory exhaust was just as close (other than being below the pan instead of in front of it).
End result is an exhaust that sounds good, looks good, and is up and out of the way of rocks and stumps. I am very happy with how it turned out and will probably never have a custom exhaust done by a shop after experiencing how easy it is to put together and put exactly where you want it. Much cheaper too. I spent around $50 on 3 J bends, about $50 on the muffler, and another $50 or so on extra pipe and flanges. Totally custom, high clearance exhaust for $150. Hard to come anywhere close to that at a real shop.
Ground-up Flat Fender Build
So... we are working on a flatty. Well we have wagoneer axles and a Chevy drivetrain, but there will be some flatty. In all reality I'm just building a 4x4 that will look like a jeep. Not much jeep, but still a fun build. Hopefully I can retain the nostalgia of the icon while still having a modern and reliable 4x4. Enjoy!
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