Well, thats EASY! Or...not so easy as I have found out. As some of you know from my earlier posts, I had a RT cat fail a few weeks back. Well... I found out soon after my Passenger was coming apart too. Hmm... do I no longer trust RT? You better believe it. I didnt even get 3 months out of them, and I was always running a wideband, well within the parameters of what they are designed to handle. Between the 2-week wait PER SIDE, and the out of pocket expense until THEIR decision what had happened, it wasnt worth the hassle. So, I built a better mouse trap.
As many of you know, and some don't, the SRT comes with 4 Catalytic Converters. The two upstream are Ceramic Substrate, and the two downstream are Metallic Substrate. Let me say that again; The two downstream are METALLIC SUBSTRATE. You know, that goofy bonus you paid RT an extra few hundred bucks for? And, get this: The STOCK CATS are actually a 5" diameter substrate, while the RT cats are only 4"! What does that translate to? That means the STOCK CATS have 160% of the Cell-Surface area of the RT cats! Before some of you knowledgeable people call it, yes, the CPI (Cells Per Inch) is the SAME as RT. The key to getting the flow out of the stock cats is the size piping used with them, and cutting down the number from 4 to 2. The primarys are high flow, too, but from what I have seen, they start to come apart FAST. my pair was already showing signs of cell fracture at 12000 miles, with various cells plugged as a result. Not nearly enough to cause a problem- but you could bet your bottom dollar by 25000 miles it would cost you some power if the rate remained the same.
Well, thats just the parts. Getting it into the car is a whole 'nother ball game. Unfortunately, at this time, there does not appear to be any way to even get the parts to do this unless you have a set of RT cats first... as the correct 3" pipe, lip, bend, and hangers are all part of their setup. However, for someone who ever has a set fail, this is certainly the way to go:
Three things are a MUST before you would even attempt this.
1. Patience. It takes a LOT of it to get the angles correct, lengths, etc.
2. TIG welder and experience using it. MIG is not a good choice at ALL in close proximity to a Catalytic converter with an Edge-To-Edge weld. Mig's produce far too much splatter, wire blow-through can break off later end end up in the core, as well as Flux-Cored Mig wire can poison the core itself.
3. A GOOD Carbide cutting disc and files to prep pipe-ends.
I may offer this service over the winter if I show dyno gains from it. Anyone who has RT cats could send me the full assmblies, and I would install the OEM's. The RT cats would still be sellable on Ebay for a hundred bucks or so each if in good shape. I may also work with RT or someone else to get bare pipe assemblies ready for installation.
SKIP- They sure are Cats! I hope you still have them all!!!
As many of you know, and some don't, the SRT comes with 4 Catalytic Converters. The two upstream are Ceramic Substrate, and the two downstream are Metallic Substrate. Let me say that again; The two downstream are METALLIC SUBSTRATE. You know, that goofy bonus you paid RT an extra few hundred bucks for? And, get this: The STOCK CATS are actually a 5" diameter substrate, while the RT cats are only 4"! What does that translate to? That means the STOCK CATS have 160% of the Cell-Surface area of the RT cats! Before some of you knowledgeable people call it, yes, the CPI (Cells Per Inch) is the SAME as RT. The key to getting the flow out of the stock cats is the size piping used with them, and cutting down the number from 4 to 2. The primarys are high flow, too, but from what I have seen, they start to come apart FAST. my pair was already showing signs of cell fracture at 12000 miles, with various cells plugged as a result. Not nearly enough to cause a problem- but you could bet your bottom dollar by 25000 miles it would cost you some power if the rate remained the same.
Well, thats just the parts. Getting it into the car is a whole 'nother ball game. Unfortunately, at this time, there does not appear to be any way to even get the parts to do this unless you have a set of RT cats first... as the correct 3" pipe, lip, bend, and hangers are all part of their setup. However, for someone who ever has a set fail, this is certainly the way to go:
Three things are a MUST before you would even attempt this.
1. Patience. It takes a LOT of it to get the angles correct, lengths, etc.
2. TIG welder and experience using it. MIG is not a good choice at ALL in close proximity to a Catalytic converter with an Edge-To-Edge weld. Mig's produce far too much splatter, wire blow-through can break off later end end up in the core, as well as Flux-Cored Mig wire can poison the core itself.
3. A GOOD Carbide cutting disc and files to prep pipe-ends.
I may offer this service over the winter if I show dyno gains from it. Anyone who has RT cats could send me the full assmblies, and I would install the OEM's. The RT cats would still be sellable on Ebay for a hundred bucks or so each if in good shape. I may also work with RT or someone else to get bare pipe assemblies ready for installation.
SKIP- They sure are Cats! I hope you still have them all!!!