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R1100S custom exhaust concept:

B

BUBBAZANETTI

Guest
so,

i think i'm going to be in "major decision" time about my bike at the end of the summer.

do i sell it, while it's still in fairly decent condition, and get ok money for it

or do i keep it and in making it unpalatable to would-be thieves in the city, turn it into a TOTAL rat bike

no-holds-barred, complete with truck bed spray liner paint and a new exhaust "idea" i've been considering

hacking the pipes completely off just above where the exhaust pipe proceeds from the cat to the mufflers:

Mr_Tate_bg.jpg

(above and to the right of the riders boot)

and installing one of these:thumb

rain-caps.gif


and totally removing the muflers, maybe i could install some sort of little luggage compartment under there!
 
I'm in process on making my own "diffused reverse flow" muffler for my 94 R1100RS from a scrapped stock muffler I got from my dealer.

I made a center divider/crossover plate, a mid-point diffuser (it clears the inside of the canister by 3/8", and an oversize outlet pipe, all from stainless steel. Now I just nee to get it TIG-welded and see how it sounds.

Worst part is that I lost no weight in the process. But it should be better breathing (like a Flowmaster muffler for a car) and better sounding without being loud. I plan to run this with a slightly higher output fuel regulator for a bit better performance.

In the orignal muffler, the stub tube coming out of the CAT is the only one that ran to the outlet at the back of the canister. The hole below it had a long perforated diffuser tube sticking out of it (not welded in), which just emptied into the canister, and I'm guessing the canister back-flowed into the hole just above my new center divider. A strange design for sure and one I can't quite figure out.

I first thought about a Y-tube connecting the two outlets to the rear outlet in a straight through design, perhaps with perforations on the Y-tube. But that was too much fab work for my simple abilities. After I studied the design of Flowmaster mufflers I came up with this setup.
 

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Ratty S

Bubba,

If you want the rest of these images, drop me a line.

Fear not; you are not alone in these urges.

Fred
 
Last edited:
Bubba,

If you want the rest of these images, drop me a line.

Fear not; you are not alone in these urges.

Fred

ohhh,

slick, i one time rode aroudn with my faring off, and i liked it!

question though, where do you relocate all the electronics off the front rails????
 
This has always been a fun, inspirational site:

http://www.ratbike.org/


i think it's the whole concept of "i'm gonna purposely make this bike look like i rode it through a house that was on fire" concept that seems so strongly juxtaposed to todays chopper and custom fads that really appeals to me.
 
Bear in mind...

increasing air/fuel flow through with stock injector mapping & rail pressures will lean it out. The system can compensate only so much. Be prepared to get a "chip" or some other method of addressing what the computer can't deal with. You Should have access to an Exhaust Gas Analyzer.

Also, balance/match any flow changes on both intake & exhaust.

My R11HR has NO muffler or cat. (avatar & Oilhead pix #36) Only a resonator & a fixed resistor network to sub as the cat. Intake is a pair of little conical K&Ns right at the injector venturis.

Result: high 17-21:1 fuel:air. BAD

Answer: change fuel rail regulator & push rail pressure from ~36 to 48 psi.
As verified on an EGA: back to ~ low 15:1.

Mileage? MUCH Worse, but that's what toys are for.

Fun Factor? 10"-12" torque wheelies & flat leaving all but stage 3 built H-Ds.

It all returns to: just what you want out of this bike?
.............disappearing like a cartoon, with a cheshire grin....<<<)))

P.S..... CAREFUL: pushing rail pressures that far has consequences on stock fittings.
 
SUCCESS! See my earlier post on this thread for the muffler design I came up with for my "stock" exhaust system. Just installed it this morning and took a ride. Nice deep tone kind of like a Staintune or Akrapovic (in my opinion).

In town tone is manageable with reasonable throttle use.

Highway tone is good, not excessive at all. Throttle response above 3500 rpm is good, maybe better than stock. Power above 4500 rpm is definitely better. I do sense a touch of lean condition around 3000 rpm, that I may address with the fuel regulator (tweakage). It does pop on decel, but again that may be addressed with a bit richer mixture.

Anybody know some easy tweaks to get a "bit" more fuel delivery?

In combo with this exahust, my bike has GS intake tubes, a K&N air filter (stock air box), blended/modified TB intake manifolds, and Autolite 3923 plugs. No surging problems. I may make my own cold air intake to get fresh cool air from the front of the bike.
 
So at the risk of bringing this waay back from the dead... assuming you've kept your bike, I'm running a very similar system on my R1100RS though I got rid of the cat and am running a 2" car exhaust pipe bent as a midpipe with a Holeshot slip on on the end. It's essentially a straight through pipe, though the slip on has stainless packing inside. I had to add a baffle to the end of it because the exhaust note was REALLY loud. With the silencer fitted it's much more muted but still a nice throaty sound.

Of course I was running lean after that so in order to compensate I raised the TPS to 0.395v at idle (move it without touching the throttle plate stops) and added a 20k ohm resistor inline with the air intake temp sensor. That tricks the engine into thinking it's getting colder and denser air, so it supplies more fuel.

I'm getting about 40-45 mpg which I'm happy with.
 
It is the way way back.....

So at the risk of bringing this waay back from the dead... assuming you've kept your bike, I'm running a very similar system on my R1100RS though I got rid of the cat and am running a 2" car exhaust pipe bent as a midpipe with a Holeshot slip on on the end. It's essentially a straight through pipe, though the slip on has stainless packing inside. I had to add a baffle to the end of it because the exhaust note was REALLY loud. With the silencer fitted it's much more muted but still a nice throaty sound.

Of course I was running lean after that so in order to compensate I raised the TPS to 0.395v at idle (move it without touching the throttle plate stops) and added a 20k ohm resistor inline with the air intake temp sensor. That tricks the engine into thinking it's getting colder and denser air, so it supplies more fuel.

I'm getting about 40-45 mpg which I'm happy with.

It's interesting about your resistor for the for the air temp sensor. There is a product called Booster Plug which reportedly does what you have done on a plug and play basis. Its supposed to smooth out lean idle and some other issues. I know my 09F800GS runs a lot better at 75 degrees than at 95 degrees. Good luck and nice work on fooling the 'puter! :thumb
 
It's interesting about your resistor for the for the air temp sensor. There is a product called Booster Plug which reportedly does what you have done on a plug and play basis. Its supposed to smooth out lean idle and some other issues. I know my 09F800GS runs a lot better at 75 degrees than at 95 degrees. Good luck and nice work on fooling the 'puter! :thumb

That's actually exactly where I got the idea from :)

For some reason I like the idea of working within the existing inputs to the Techlusion box much more than adding an entire piggyback system (Techlusion, Power Commander, etc) to needlessly complicate things. My other bike is an Airhead, I like things simple. The fewer points of failure the better (see my other thread on the weird rattling noise I'm trying to pin down).
 
Sweet...

That's actually exactly where I got the idea from :)

For some reason I like the idea of working within the existing inputs to the Techlusion box much more than adding an entire piggyback system (Techlusion, Power Commander, etc) to needlessly complicate things. My other bike is an Airhead, I like things simple. The fewer points of failure the better (see my other thread on the weird rattling noise I'm trying to pin down).

I enjoy innovation. I'll bet it's all soldered and sealed nice also. :clap
 
I enjoy innovation. I'll bet it's all soldered and sealed nice also. :clap

well, not quite yet...

I've been experimenting with different resistance values and decided to install a potentiometer instead of the resistor so I can make changes later down the road (sorry for the pun). I've just got to order up some of the Bosch connectors (same as the fuel injector ones) to make the harness all pretty.
 
What, no resistance box?

well, not quite yet...

I've been experimenting with different resistance values and decided to install a potentiometer instead of the resistor so I can make changes later down the road (sorry for the pun). I've just got to order up some of the Bosch connectors (same as the fuel injector ones) to make the harness all pretty.

Over here where not many things are fixed anymore-I'm not sure where I'd get a control that was that linear. I would have to spend some time with my Simpson 260 on it to check it out. While you're in there-nitrous?:laugh
 
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