thats not EVER how exhaust systems fail. And if they do, you don't just fit one pipe back inside the other. Theyre the SAME SIZE. ID and OD. And wheres the play in the pipe coming from that you can move them left to right to make them fit ? I call BS. even IF you were fortunate enough to have a nice clean break like that and not some rusty mess, you'd have to use a sleeve and a couple clamps and some sealant, at best.
I did the exact same thing few weeks ago. Tightened the clamp super tight and zero leak and quiet as new. So far so good. Sure I'll have to replace it one day but not for now.
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i recommend their stainless clamp. won’t deteriorate as fast
Exhaust sleeve clamp would be better but this fix probably won’t last long
Love it…!
You forgot to mention the reamer tool you’re gonna need…
thats not EVER how exhaust systems fail. And if they do, you don't just fit one pipe back inside the other. Theyre the SAME SIZE. ID and OD. And wheres the play in the pipe coming from that you can move them left to right to make them fit ? I call BS. even IF you were fortunate enough to have a nice clean break like that and not some rusty mess, you'd have to use a sleeve and a couple clamps and some sealant, at best.
And just like that…….you’ll be back under the truck in a couple months replacing the muffler like you should have to begin with.
I did the exact same thing few weeks ago. Tightened the clamp super tight and zero leak and quiet as new. So far so good. Sure I'll have to replace it one day but not for now.
That's a good way to fix it until you have time to put a larger sleeve over the joint with 2 clamps.
But dude, pipes abutt each other, not 1 slips inside other.
The clamp is not wide enough.
Thats no fix… more so a bandage
Temporary fix, still leaks, you will see black smoke on the pipe.
Sorry for the emoji, my bad.
Take care.