Various Motorcycle Sounds

I have made a few video clips of various motorcycles, and how they sound that are posted over on the Motopsyco.com Facebook page just in case you are interested. While there are not many now I will be adding more as time goes by. The first 3 vids I link to will be 3 different exhaust systems on 250 Ninjas.

The first video up is an older one of an EX250 with a mean sounding Yoshimura System on it. Click here to go directly to the video!

In the second video the bike has a pair of Emgo Dunstall Replica mufflers on it. This was shot as the owner was leaving work one day when the temperature was about 40 degrees Fahrenheit. Click here to go directly to the video!

The third video features one of the most earsplitting loud motorcycles I have ever heard. If I had not heard it with my own ears I would never have believed that 250cc could make that much noise. Thankfully it is done & I never have to hear it run again! Click here to go check it out. It does have a severe case of “megaphonitis” at low speed but once it gets “on the pipe” it pulls alright.

And just in case you were wondering how that Mac System on the Suburban Assault Scrambler sounded you can listen to it by clicking here.

There is also a video with the sound of a totally stock Honda CRF150 posted, just click here.

I’ll continue to add to this library of short clips as I get the chance so check back often, sign up for notifications on the right side of the page, like the Facebook page.

Installing Dunstall Replica Mufflers on an EX250 Ninja

When I last posted about my work on the Minimum Ninja, you saw a photo of a damaged and worn out aftermarket exhaust header. When my wife bought this as an abandoned bike from the back lot of a Kawasaki dealer for a c-note a few years ago, it had the Yoshi pipe on it, so I had toΒ  buy a stock head pipe. If your Ninja has the stock mufflers you don’t have to do all of this work, just figure out where to cut them off, put the right adapters in the new muffler, make some brackets and go. Not being that fortunate I had to do a little more work, not a problem for me tinkering on a motorcycle is as much fun as riding one. I started with a piece of 1 1/4″ water pipe,way bigger than the exhaust pipe but a good enough match to the size of the flange around the pipe to be easy to weld.

1 1/4 inch water pipe nipple

So I stuck it in my handy dandy pipe bender and bent it to the desired angle. Please note that pipe benders like this will NOT bend thin wall tubing without crushing it, they are meant to bend schedule 40 steel pipe or very thick walled DOM tubing.

An inexpensive pipe bender

After bending and cutting it to the right length grind one down enough to slip into the new muffler. And absolutely grind away all of the galvanizing from the area to be welded. The fumes given of by burning galvanizing are very dangerous. Use all necessary precautions. I would have used black pipe but the hardware store was closed and Lowes did not carry it in this size.

home made muffler adapter

one is done and one more to go

Then I mocked it all up on the bike and tack welded the adapters to the head pipes.

Ninja Dunstall muffler adapter mockup

Mocked up for tack weld

After that I pulled everything back off and seal welded the pipes together, cleaned off the scale and shot the pipes with a coat of high heat paint

tack welding completed

tack welding completed

pipes seal welded & painted

pipes seal welded & painted

Then I wrapped the entire head pipe with header wrap and reinstalled everything.

Head pipe wrapped with 2" wide fiberglass wrap

Head pipe wrapped with 2″ wide fiberglass wrap

I did take the centerstand off, 😦 it just did not work with the new pipes. Besides now I have a motorcycle lift table when I need to work on it now.

Next time I’ll show you how I lined the fuel tank with tank Kreem. An oil & plug change how to is in the works too.

Peace Y’all

 fiberglass header wrap

P.S. This thing sounds really good now and is not nearly as loud as it was.