There is no difference in power between equivalent wet and dry systems. If you pick up power, it's because you got better exhaust, not because water is no longer mixing. Dry pipes are dry purely to combat water from being drawn back into the engine due to big cam overlap- reversion.
Eickerts will make the same power as CMI's, but they don't look as cool. Manifolds will corrode and headers will vibration crack. But I've seen way more cracked headers than rotten manifolds, especially if you maintain your boat properly and fresh-water flush. And tube headers cost more.
I like the way my CMI's are set up. They are dry through the transom with a switchable muffler on the end. The water mixes in the muffler. With the mufflers open, they sound like dry exhaust. When they are closed, they sound like your average wet exhaust with switchable mufflers. I would not like it without the mufflers.
Dry pipes are just plain rude and will cause all the problems listed above. A 420 HP engine does not need them at all. A nice set of CMI headers will gain some power. I have rather large power with wet exhaust and downturns to keep the exhaust underwater at idle. I am well below the legal limit at idle. If we as boaters continue to thumb our nose at the noise issues our fun will end with enforcement. Every state has noise laws some are not enforced very well...yet. Boat nice.
Dry pipes are just plain rude and will cause all the problems listed above. A 420 HP engine does not need them at all. A nice set of CMI headers will gain some power. I have rather large power with wet exhaust and downturns to keep the exhaust underwater at idle. I am well below the legal limit at idle. If we as boaters continue to thumb our nose at the noise issues our fun will end with enforcement. Every state has noise laws some are not enforced very well...yet. Boat nice.
Dry pipes are just plain rude and will cause all the problems listed above. A 420 HP engine does not need them at all. A nice set of CMI headers will gain some power. I have rather large power with wet exhaust and downturns to keep the exhaust underwater at idle. I am well below the legal limit at idle. If we as boaters continue to thumb our nose at the noise issues our fun will end with enforcement. Every state has noise laws some are not enforced very well...yet. Boat nice.
My vote is for Stainless Marines. Reasonably quiet, good performance, and a weight savings of roughly 80 lbs over the stock cast exhaust.. Your not turning big HP numbers, you do not need header style exhaust, nor the associated headaches..
My vote is for Stainless Marines. Reasonably quiet, good performance, and a weight savings of roughly 80 lbs over the stock cast exhaust.. Your not turning big HP numbers, you do not need header style exhaust, nor the associated headaches..
Yes we do. From 9:00 PM to 9:00 AM anywhere on the lake and anytime within 50 feet of a public or private dock. The sound level is 90 decibels per the SAE J2005 standard. See Subchapter 7 of the rules (300:35-7-6) on the GRDA website. We are just lucky they do not enforce it. There is also the water muffling rule (300:35-7-5). This is why I put the mufflers back on my boat since I run it mostly at night.
I was always under the impression that headers would lead to better power gains over stock than the high performance manifolds. It seems some people don't necessarily think so...... So which is it? Do high perf. manifolds like the S/M perform as well as something like CMI headers? I've been considering an upgrade on my 502 currently running just under 500 hp.
We pulled into Shoreline Village with the boat and someone asked us how fast it was from the dock. We told them 112mph but we probably had a couple more miles an hour with a prop change... guy gave us a big grin and a thumbs up. Gotta love a 75mph boat that sounds like she runs a hundred!
It has Gibsons on it now and it's pretty tolerable.
Yes we do. From 9:00 PM to 9:00 AM anywhere on the lake and anytime within 50 feet of a public or private dock. The sound level is 90 decibels per the SAE J2005 standard. See Subchapter 7 of the rules (300:35-7-6) on the GRDA website. We are just lucky they do not enforce it. There is also the water muffling rule (300:35-7-5). This is why I put the mufflers back on my boat since I run it mostly at night.
The other issue with running dry pipes is the pipes have to line up perfect with the hull, which usually requires high dollar custom welding. With wet you'll have a rubber coupler that gives you some wiggle room.
I thought it was very expensive, not to mention the high dollar template for the welding. At shop rates, the mockup cost as much as the pipes. But they are cool and where else can you still run an open exhaust and go as fast as you want?