I want to cut them out, but my mom doesn’t want me to. We live in Arkansas, so no inspections here, and I don’t even have the right tools to do it. Someone come to take them
I spent years praying someone would steal mine with a PO420 code, so my insurance could replace them, but no one ever did.
Kit said:
I spent years praying someone would steal mine with a PO420 code, so my insurance could replace them, but no one ever did.
You could’ve just done it yourself and filed a claim, lol.
@KathleenDavis
That would be FRAUD, and I would NEVER!
Kit said:
@KathleenDavis
That would be FRAUD, and I would NEVER!
Oh, right! Forgot about big brother insurance bots. I mean, who’d even want to take those things off anyway, right?
Do what you want, but straight piping your exhaust can hurt your gas mileage and horsepower. The lack of back pressure messes with the air-to-fuel ratio.
Celine said:
Do what you want, but straight piping your exhaust can hurt your gas mileage and horsepower. The lack of back pressure messes with the air-to-fuel ratio.
Pretty sure that’s been debunked like 50 million times. Unless it’s a two-stroke engine? I hope you’re kidding.
@Sky
It’s not 100% debunked. Some older models or specific configurations do experience issues without a catalytic converter.
Celine said:
@Sky
It’s not 100% debunked. Some older models or specific configurations do experience issues without a catalytic converter.
Ever heard of a tune?
Celine said:
@Sky
It’s not 100% debunked. Some older models or specific configurations do experience issues without a catalytic converter.
Ever heard of a tune?
Yes.
Celine said:
Do what you want, but straight piping your exhaust can hurt your gas mileage and horsepower. The lack of back pressure messes with the air-to-fuel ratio.
Dude, look at the truck… do you think gas mileage is an issue?
@Rohan
If we’re going there, dude, look at the truck… should the catalytic converter even be your first concern? Lol.