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August 1999 - Vol 1, No.
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Products
and Services
2 into
1 Exhaust Systems
By Jeff
Henon

The Yamaha Vstar
is styled to look like a perfectly preserved classic American motorcycle
from the postwar era. For the most part, Yamaha succeeded with the
Vstar’s styling, and the few bits that don't belong can be
easily replaced with something from the aftermarket. And nothing
completes that vintage look like a 2 into 1 exhaust system with
serrated head pipe covers.
There are currently 2 manufacturers
offering this type of exhaust system in North America. The first
is Daytona (Japan) and the second is Roadhouse (USA).
I own a modified Daytona exhaust and
have what I consider to be the ideal set-up for the way my bike
is dressed. The Daytona exhaust is made up of high quality chrome
plated heavy gauge tubing that should last as long as my bike. It
looks like it was stolen off of an old Harley knucklehead and adapted
to fit the vstar from the serrated covers mentioned earlier to the
way the pipes curve and join together. You can’t buy a more
retro-looking exhaust than this.
Unfortunately, the vintage looking
cigar-shaped muffler Daytona includes with this system doesn’t
provide the rumble you’d expect after paying $470 to replace
the too quiet stock exhaust. So, with my trusty parts catalog in
hand I did some creative parts swapping and replaced the cigar muffler
with a single drag pipe crafted from an automotive exhaust pipe
($12). After getting my new tailpipe chrome plated ($50) I slipped
in an HP-plus performance baffle ($20) and got the sound I was looking
for. Does it sound good? Well, I’ve been told by a few people
that I have the best sounding Vstar they’ve heard. It’s
quiet out idle but gets nastier the more gas you give it. Click
here to listen to it.
While in Kinston I got to look at the
Roadhouse system ($570) on Dave (Netx) Barber’s Vstar. Roadhouse
states they designed their exhaust for a meaty sound. Well I can
say that they succeeded. The Roadhouse exhaust is a notch better
than the Daytona in fit and finish as well. The inclusion of stainless
steel serrated covers makes clean-up less of a hassle than the chrome
plated covers on the Daytona exhaust. And the pipe bends are more
flowing than the 90 degree bends found on the Daytona. While not
as vintage looking, the Roadhouse should have less of a problem
with pipe bluing than the Daytona. To achieve these more gradual
bends the Roadhouse system requires you to relocate your right footpeg
and brake pedal about 2-1/2 inches outboard with the included spacers
and hardware. This is the Roadhouse’s only fault on an otherwise
great system.
Which pipe do I recommend? Well that
depends on what trade-offs bother you less. If sound is important
to you, and you want to bolt it on and be done with it, go with
the Roadhouse. However if you want a more vintage looking system
but want it quiet, you’ll be happiest with the Daytona. And
lastly if you want the best vintage look and meaty sound, do what
I did and trash the Daytona’s cigar muffler and replace it
with an HP+ baffled straight pipe.

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