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Has anyone installed the exhaust loop eliminator?

WallypJr

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I was curious if combined with an A/M exhaust if it made the exhaust note sound any different?
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The purpose of the loop eliminator is lost on me. The loop is to equalize lengths of the two exhaust banks of the V6, which is a good thing, but that is omitted on many other makes/models.
 

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The purpose of the loop eliminator is lost on me. The loop is to equalize lengths of the two exhaust banks of the V6, which is a good thing, but that is omitted on many other makes/models.
Would that be similar to the X or H pipe on a V8 exhaust to help even out the notes - and in the process increase power (by installing the H or X)
 
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WallypJr

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Exhaust Addicts on YT did a true dual on one but left the loop in, i was just curious if it was eliminated,would help with drone or the rasp that the 3.6's get.. guess ill have to wait and see!
 

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kd1yt

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Exhaust Addicts on YT did a true dual on one but left the loop in, i was just curious if it was eliminated,would help with drone or the rasp that the 3.6's get.. guess ill have to wait and see!
Let us know!

I know that people may differ on this but I can't imagine why the factory would have spent the engineering time and additional material cost for the loop, if the loop didn't have some substantial benefit.
 
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WallypJr

WallypJr

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Let us know!

I know that people may differ on this but I can't imagine why the factory would have spent the engineering time and additional material cost for the loop, if the loop didn't have some substantial benefit.
I think it benefits the single outlet more than a true dual set up... I'll have to guinea pig mine I guess...lol
 

bleda2002

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I think it benefits the single outlet more than a true dual set up... I'll have to guinea pig mine I guess...lol
The point of the loop is the equal lengths, if you are going true dual then you could eliminate it if you end up with equal lengths on each side with out it. I'd actually think with a true dual exhaust having equal lengths is more important to keeping the exhaust flowing equally from the headers.
 

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The loop is an exhaust tuning (as in performance tuning) feature. It's a good thing.

As for sound... It's a V6... The best sounding V6 in the world sounds kinda like an OK I6, and only then on a good day with a tune. You can't make a V6 not sound like crap... Well... You can... But that requires an engine swap with a "plus two cylinders" mod...

It's not a race car. The only actual improvement in my opinion would be to make it quieter. Otherwise, focus your truck bucks on things that matter like tires or something.
 
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WallypJr

WallypJr

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The loop is an exhaust tuning (as in performance tuning) feature. It's a good thing.

As for sound... It's a V6... The best sounding V6 in the world sounds kinda like an OK I6, and only then on a good day with a tune. You can't make a V6 not sound like crap... Well... You can... But that requires an engine swap with a "plus two cylinders" mod...

It's not a race car. The only actual improvement in my opinion would be to make it quieter. Otherwise, focus your truck bucks on things that matter like tires or something.
Yeah I’m not looking for loud or V8 sound but just a little better flow and some sort of exhaust note…lol my wife’s Durango gt with 3.6 sounds good when you jump on it!
 
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Yeah I’m not looking for loud or V8 sound but just a little better flow
It's not going to get much better than stock without a lot of money, and that money starts with R&D that I don't know has been done. OEMs in the current era are very incentivized to maximize efficiency (not specifically fuel efficiency, but efficiency in an engineering sense). That sort of exhaust tuning feature would never have been considered in the 60s because no one cared about fuel economy and there were no CAFE standards to meet. These days, OEMs are squeezing about everything they can out of drivetrains. There's not a ton of gains to be made on the aftermarket without sacrificing some other critical aspect (i.e. reliability).

The sound of a V6 sucks. It's my opinion, but I'm not alone there. Opinions aside, it's the very expensive acoustic equivalent of a sticker though. Only this sticker is annoying to those around you on the road and trail, and will probably make your engine run worse.
 

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In my opinion it's done so that the exhaust pulses from opposite banks don't meet at the same time where they merge into one pipe. You could definitely delete it with a dual exhaust, but should keep it if not.
 

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In my opinion it's done so that the exhaust pulses from opposite banks don't meet at the same time where they merge into one pipe. You could definitely delete it with a dual exhaust, but should keep it if not.
I don't pretend to know the details, but my general understanding is that it is there to, overall, improve exhaust flow and scavenging. I was impressed when I saw it there when I first crawled around under my JT
 

spectre6000

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The details are that the engine fires on an even 120° spacing. Exhaust gases (like air) are fluids, and they have mass, etc. All the requisite features. As an exhaust pulse travels down the exhaust pipe, the moving mass of fluid generates a high pressure zone in front of it, and a low pressure zone behind it. The high pressure is from moving what's already there out of the way, and the low pressure is what's left behind rushing in to fill the void. In isolation, that's about it, but there's a bunch of these things right on top of each other. If you tune the exhaust runners to be equal length, the low pressure zone behind one exhaust pulse can mitigate the resistance of the high pressure zone from the one that follows, and so on. In so doing, it's easier for the exhaust pulses to make their way out of the system. If you combine cooling (and other effects), the negative pressure exceeds the high pressure aspects of each pulse such that there is a net negative. That effect, combined with valve overlap on NA engines (this does not apply for FI engines), results in the exhaust gasses being pulled from the engine by the negative pressure in the exhaust manifold rather than the piston being required to expend energy to push them out (or at least somewhere more favorable along that spectrum). This is called "scavenging". It makes the exhaust flow much more freely, with low to no effort, resulting in better power and efficiency. Removing that loop eliminates the advantages of the scavenging effect, and makes it harder for your engine to expel exhaust gases. That additional effort required to push those gasses has to come from somewhere, and that somewhere is power and efficiency that would have otherwise been used to turn the wheels. You make less power, and get worse fuel economy (the two are directly linked). Also, you make an engine that sounds like ass sound even more assy.
 

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Livernois said they saw no performance gain by doing this.
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