Interested in drilling or punching out the baffles in my stock cans. I've done the drill out method on my 06 Vulcan 1600 classic, that was real fun. Three plates to drill through using hole saw. Two removed from outlet side the third had to be cut from inlet side meaning you had to pull the entire exhaust system and separate the mufflers from the pipes. It was a lot of work.Heck I'll do it, bring it on over.
Is there a write up some where that details (step-by-step) either punch or drill process for the C-10?
Thanks.
1 1/8" hole saw bit and a 12" extension. The bit will fit exactly into the end of the exhaust. Slide it in till it stops pull the trigger untill it moves forward again; repeat opposite side. All doneYep. That's the "How-To".
Yep. That's the "How-To".Yes sir a step drill will work just fine. One word of caution; when using the extension make sure that the bit is securely attached to the extension. It really sucks to drill out the baffle for a friend only to find that when you pull back on the drill you find only an extension. Lesson learned that day LOL. All turned out ok.
I used a step drill, because it was what I had. Worked fine.
Originally invented by SISF, you do the deed (easily) w/ a 24" long rebar and a BFH. Have a friend hold the bike firmly w/ front brake. Then tap the pointed end of the rebar through the baffle. Repeat on the other side...no muss, no fuss, no crumbs to clean up.No offense to Steve, that method seemed so.......well crude. We have come along way since the stone hammer and granite chisel. Power tools are your friend. A couple of revs from the engine blows all the crumbs right out.
Let me get this right, if I punch a hole in the outlet side using whatever tool I have handy that is all it takes to open the exhaust?
Sounds way to simple, but it's a 12 year old bike.
Buzz
Does anybody have any sound clips of this? I am interested in doing it, but I don't want to have the bike become obnoxiousness loud. Had enough of that with my old bike which had open pipes with no baffles at all. And it wasn't a Harley.
Does anybody have any sound clips of this? I am interested in doing it, but I don't want to have the bike become obnoxiousness loud. Had enough of that with my old bike which had open pipes with no baffles at all. And it wasn't a Harley.A bit more growl than stock, but not obnoxious. I love it. Wind noise is far more of a noticeable problem for me than exhaust noise.
I'm working on shortening a pair of stock cans.Yes Sir, Mama K did not want these cans falling apart while riding down the road
Had to put the project on hold until school is out and I can take them to my buddy's shop in Phoenix to use his chop saw so I can get a clean, straight cut on the can.
I can tell you one thing though--the 4 rivets on the front of the can just hold on the beauty rings, nothing more.