Picked up a mild steel TC exhaust system (since I'm going to remove the OEM one to finally drop the oil pan to reseal it to attempt to cut down on the anti-rust treatment of the rear frame...) from the header to the muffler...and, in slipping the parts together "just to see", I notice that the fit of the pipes is, um, a bit loose. OK. Now, I have the stainless band clamps to attach the cross pipe to the header, then a clamp for the muffler to the cross pipe...but, even tightened down...there is a lot of slop. Maybe I'm overthinking it, but, to me, everything should be nicely snugged up to minimize leaks, right?
So...without overengineering the solution...how?
Figure there are some who've run into this. My thoughts?
1. Liberal application of Firegum (or equivalent over here) to the male end and just honk the clamp down as much as possible to attempt to compress the mild steel female side of the joint.
2. Cut short slots 180 degrees to each other, maybe the thickness of the slot about 1/16" at the end, liberal firegum on the male side, honk down.
3. Weld in situ? Nah. Then I'd be getting out the sawzall every time I wanted to pull it down and replacing pipework.
FWIW, a liberal application of a combo of Kroil, PB Blaster, and drizzling a 50/50 mixture of acetone and ATF on the OEM header nuts resulted in 8 loose nuts (I know, go ahead and chuckle...) and no backed-out studs in the head. Didn't even use any persuasion with the blue wrench (It can't be stuck if it's melted, right?), but did use a shorty ratchet handle (to limit the torque), a good 6-point socket from my snap-on kit, and steady pressure to turn the nut. If you rush...that's when bad things happen, and I did NOT want this to turn into a 'damn, I have to pull the head to replace studs because I used the 3' breaker bar...'
Thoughts welcome...