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Home > Archive > Home Repair forum > February 2008 > Anyone modified snowblower exhaust?
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Anyone modified snowblower exhaust?
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| Darryl 2008-02-05, 1:26 pm |
| My snowblower, probably like a lot of them, has the muffler located
right smack in front of the operator. I smell like a refinery after
30 minutes of snowblowing.
Has anyone heard or seen of anyone putting a black iron pipe extension
on the exhaust, then putting the muffler on the end of that, in order
to extend the exhaust out or up? I'd love to be able to route the
exhaust fumes somewhere other than right in front of me.
My only concern would be any possible backpressure created by a longer
exhaust pipe.
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| Darryl wrote:
....
> Has anyone heard or seen of anyone putting a black iron pipe extension
> on the exhaust, then putting the muffler on the end of that, in order
> to extend the exhaust out or up? I'd love to be able to route the
> exhaust fumes somewhere other than right in front of me.
>
> My only concern would be any possible backpressure created by a longer
> exhaust pipe.
Done all the time -- no problem as long as isn't ridiculously long or a
whole lot of bends. One 90 or a couple 45's would be fine. If the sex
works out right, I'll try to use street-els instead of 90s as they're a
little longer in sweep...
--
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| S. Barker 2008-02-05, 1:26 pm |
| to add to dpb's reply, if you want to go farther, just go up a pipe size.
Remember, though, you may need to support what you add. The aluminum block
won't like to support a foot or so of pipe and a couple of fittings, plus a
muffler.
s
"Darryl" <DarrylJ@yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:6ba0ba17-5cca-4d59-b495-4857f7fbf4e5@e25g2000prg.googlegroups.com...
> My snowblower, probably like a lot of them, has the muffler located
> right smack in front of the operator. I smell like a refinery after
> 30 minutes of snowblowing.
>
> Has anyone heard or seen of anyone putting a black iron pipe extension
> on the exhaust, then putting the muffler on the end of that, in order
> to extend the exhaust out or up? I'd love to be able to route the
> exhaust fumes somewhere other than right in front of me.
>
> My only concern would be any possible backpressure created by a longer
> exhaust pipe.
>
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| Meat Plow 2008-02-05, 1:26 pm |
| On Tue, 05 Feb 2008 08:48:16 -0800, Darryl wrote:
> My snowblower, probably like a lot of them, has the muffler located
> right smack in front of the operator. I smell like a refinery after
> 30 minutes of snowblowing.
>
> Has anyone heard or seen of anyone putting a black iron pipe extension
> on the exhaust, then putting the muffler on the end of that, in order
> to extend the exhaust out or up? I'd love to be able to route the
> exhaust fumes somewhere other than right in front of me.
>
> My only concern would be any possible backpressure created by a longer
> exhaust pipe.
If it's a 2 cycle changing the exhaust could affect performance.
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| ransley 2008-02-05, 1:26 pm |
| On Feb 5, 10:48=A0am, Darryl <Darr...@yahoo.com> wrote:
> My snowblower, probably like a lot of them, has the muffler located
> right smack in front of the operator. =A0I smell like a refinery after
> 30 minutes of snowblowing.
>
> Has anyone heard or seen of anyone putting a black iron pipe extension
> on the exhaust, then putting the muffler on the end of that, in order
> to extend the exhaust out or up? =A0I'd love to be able to route the
> exhaust fumes somewhere other than right in front of me.
>
> My only concern would be any possible backpressure created by a longer
> exhaust pipe.
Maybe an extension, flexible pipe might work. moving the muffler and
not designing good brackets could put excess strain on the head.
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| Since a snowblower is about waist high at the handles and about 2 feet wide
at the best, where would you extend the exhaust to, that would not be still
in front of you?
You could possibly get a way with an elbow to point the exhaust down. Check
your engine, many these days don't have a threaded pipe outlet, but use an
unthreaded hole with a gasket and the muffler attaches with two bolts, could
make changes more difficult.
"Darryl" <DarrylJ@yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:6ba0ba17-5cca-4d59-b495-4857f7fbf4e5@e25g2000prg.googlegroups.com...
> My snowblower, probably like a lot of them, has the muffler located
> right smack in front of the operator. I smell like a refinery after
> 30 minutes of snowblowing.
>
> Has anyone heard or seen of anyone putting a black iron pipe extension
> on the exhaust, then putting the muffler on the end of that, in order
> to extend the exhaust out or up? I'd love to be able to route the
> exhaust fumes somewhere other than right in front of me.
>
> My only concern would be any possible backpressure created by a longer
> exhaust pipe.
>
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| Edwin Pawlowski 2008-02-06, 3:25 am |
|
"Darryl" <DarrylJ@yahoo.com> wrote in message
>
> Has anyone heard or seen of anyone putting a black iron pipe extension
> on the exhaust, then putting the muffler on the end of that, in order
> to extend the exhaust out or up? I'd love to be able to route the
> exhaust fumes somewhere other than right in front of me.
Can be done with no problem. Even a 90 degree elbow would help.
Consider flex tubing routed to you pants so you don't freeze your XXX off
out there.
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| Why not leave the muffler alone and fashion a 'tailpipe' out of sheet-metal
ductwork to direct the exhaust away?
"Darryl" <DarrylJ@yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:6ba0ba17-5cca-4d59-b495-4857f7fbf4e5@e25g2000prg.googlegroups.com...
> My snowblower, probably like a lot of them, has the muffler located
> right smack in front of the operator. I smell like a refinery after
> 30 minutes of snowblowing.
>
> Has anyone heard or seen of anyone putting a black iron pipe extension
> on the exhaust, then putting the muffler on the end of that, in order
> to extend the exhaust out or up? I'd love to be able to route the
> exhaust fumes somewhere other than right in front of me.
>
> My only concern would be any possible backpressure created by a longer
> exhaust pipe.
>
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