some of you guys sound like my local weather guessers…..”the cobras are coming …the cobras are coming” lol
here’s the bottom line….if you’re more about form over function Cobras are fine (i mean c’mon it’s 10hp)…if you’re function over form…they’re not.
The End
You joined 3 months ago an your trying to say 10hp lost is nothing. I'm pretty sure it's 10whp loss which is a lot. That's losing over 10% over a stock Gen1. When a proper exhaust an jet kit can gain over 10% whp. It's been proven for over 20yrs.some of you guys sound like my local weather guessers…..”the cobras are coming …the cobras are coming” lol
here’s the bottom line….if you’re more about form over function Cobras are fine (i mean c’mon it’s 10hp)…if you’re function over form…they’re not.
The End
Or if you just want a bit more noise you can drill the OE silencers.
Mine are drilled now with five 7/16" holes and drilled pennies as spacers. I have heard many bikes in my life but not the V-Max except in videos. That said, I can't imagine it could sound any better with any other kind of exhaust. When I started it up for the first time, I was so happy and did the victory dance. Better than any Harley and it was impressive without being obnoxiously loud. More like a built car sound than a bike and it growls like a tiger.If you just want to hear it, like I did, consider drilling out the stock pipes. Takes a few minutes and cost $0.00.
@Scrape can you explain what you did exactly?Mine are drilled now with five 7/16" holes and drilled pennies as spacers. I have heard many bikes in my life but not the V-Max except in videos. That said, I can't imagine it could sound any better with any other kind of exhaust. When I started it up for the first time, I was so happy and did the victory dance. Better than any Harley and it was impressive without being obnoxiously loud. More like a built car sound than a bike and it growls like a tiger.
@Fire-medic thanks for the quick reply! Hard for me to visualize the penny placement, any pics? Thanks!Remove the rear disc of the megaphone end, drill 5 holes 7/16" around the central exhaust outlet. Pop-rivet or screw the removed disc back-on, using pennies for spacers, pennies are drilled for the screws or pop-rivets used to hold-on the large end disc . Exhaust now comes out that central OEM hole, but also through the five 7/16" holes and between the megaphone end and the once-removed disc. The pennies allow a narrow space for the exhaust to squeeze-out, a bit louder than the single megaphone exhaust outlet.
Remove the rear disc of the megaphone end, drill 5 holes 7/16" around the central exhaust outlet. Pop-rivet or screw the removed disc back-on, using pennies for spacers, pennies are drilled for the screws or pop-rivets used to hold-on the large end disc . Exhaust now comes out that central OEM hole, but also through the five 7/16" holes and between the megaphone end and the once-removed disc. The pennies allow a narrow space for the exhaust to squeeze-out, a bit louder than the single megaphone exhaust outlet.
@Fire-medic great explanation! I will certainly consider this method. Thank you!View attachment 92989
Drill out the rivets, remove the disc and drill the big holes between the rivet holes, and in the welded-end of the megaphone. Then pop-rivet or screw-on the concave disc the rivets held in-place. The pennies just space that riveted-on concave disc to allow exhaust gas to escape with a bit more growl.
The pennies are beneath the concave disc, and are not seen. You could use some flat washers instead of pennies with each penny or washer having a hole in it for the pop-rivet or the flat washer to space-out the concave plate.
Thanks, never thought about those and would hold better than screws. One of my initial concerns was to make the pipes look like they haven't been messed with, so rivets were more in order.Maybe nut-serts?
Enter your email address to join: