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50 Series Muffler

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Flowmaster 50 Series Muffler

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MSRP: $



 
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Rating
Reviewed by:
Aaron Adkins


Review Date
June 11, 2009

Overall Rating
 5 of 5

Value Rating
 5 of 5

Used product for
Less than 1 month

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Review 1 of 32

Price Paid:  $110.00 from Muffler & Auto Cente

Year / Model Reviewed:
2007 Dodge Ram 1500

Strengths:
-Agressive, Bassy sound
-Makes a V6 sound MEAN
-Overall a great value for the outcome

Weaknesses:
-None at all

Summary:
I just got this muffler put on my V6 and it went from the boring stock sound to a rumbling, bassy sound. I paid $110 for the muffler and labor, but I had to get an extension pipe installed for $25 more.


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Rating
Reviewed by:
rugby01



Review Date
November 3, 2008

Overall Rating
 5 of 5

Value Rating
 5 of 5

Used product for
Less than 1 month

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Review 2 of 32

Price Paid:  $120.00 from Summit

Year / Model Reviewed:
2006 F150

Strengths:
Great sound and even better idle sound

Weaknesses:
None that I can hear

Summary:
Upgrade from the Model 40 to a Model 50. Boy does my Dentist thank me. If you want to rubmle the fillings out of you mouth, then Model 40. If you just want to be abel to hear and feel your engine under load, model 50. Great sound and even better idle sound

Similar Products Used:
Flowmaster Model 40


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Rating
Reviewed by:
Josh Fritz


Review Date
March 6, 2007

Overall Rating
 5 of 5

Value Rating
 5 of 5

Used product for
3 Months to 1 year

Visitors rate this review
5.00 of 5, 2.00 votes

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Review 3 of 32

Price Paid:  $100.00 from Autopartswarehouse.c

Year / Model Reviewed:
1995 Pontiac Grand Am SE

Strengths:
Sound, increased power and gas-mileage, tough and rust resistant stainless steel makeup

Weaknesses:
Some people don't like the dull stainless steel look

Summary:
This muffler is awesome. It turned my average sounding V6 into a deep rumbling beast. For my car, this muffler is just right, not too loud and not too soft. Improved my gasmileage by about 2-3 miles per gallon as well, but the deep, smooth sound alone is enough to buy this muffler.


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Rating
Reviewed by:
Andrew


Review Date
December 9, 2006

Overall Rating
 3 of 5

Value Rating
 3 of 5

Used product for
3 Months to 1 year

Visitors rate this review
5.00 of 5, 1.00 votes

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Review 4 of 32

Price Paid:  $560.00 from peral auto care

Year / Model Reviewed:
2002 ford f150 fx4 supercab/ 50 series flowmaster

Strengths:
looks great on truck dual rear exit/ 40 series going on

Weaknesses:
not loud enough

Summary:
i have a 2002 f150 with 4.6l v8 the 50 series flowmaster kit

Similar Products Used:
cherry bomb, v force, stock :(


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Rating
Reviewed by:
Rocker



Review Date
May 4, 2006

Overall Rating
 5 of 5

Value Rating
 5 of 5

Used product for
Less than 1 month

Visitors rate this review
4.00 of 5, 4.00 votes

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Review 5 of 32

Price Paid:  $95.00 from Summit Racing

Year / Model Reviewed:
2003 Toyota Tacoma 3.4 TRD

Strengths:
- Quiet (not a strength for some)
- Powerful sounding
- Deep (not throaty though, like a packed-type muffler: more hollow like a Flowmaster should be) and not raspy at all

Weaknesses:
- A little pricey for just a muffler
- Maybe even a little TOO quiet (I know I've been touting that as a good thing, and it is, but I'd still like to hear that there's something aftermarket on there!)

Summary:
This muffler is on a 2003 Toyota Tacoma TRD 4x4 3.4 (5VZFE) V-6 5 spd. I wanted a quiet, free-flowing exhaust. I ordered a 50 Series SUV (part # 52457), which is greater in length and width (and therefore volume) than the standard 50 Series and labor cost was $55 at a local muffler shop to have the stock muffler cut out and the new one welded in, retaining all the stock 2.25" pipes. I expected them to mount it kind of sideways (the whole purpose of getting an offset out), but they put it in level and it works great anyway with the stock tail pipe location. When you start it up, you hear a nice, low rumble and then it's barely louder than stock when the rpms settle down to idle. Now, I'm a huge fan of American V-8s and their exhaust notes, and not a fan at all of loud rice-racer exhausts (unless we're talking sportbikes). This is a low rumble that is pleasing even to me. Engaging the clutch and shifting through the gears is maybe 15-20% louder than stock (if that), and what you do hear, all the way up to redline is a good, relatively deep, solid tone and not loud, raspy, high-pitched noise pollution that is common to so many other exhausts on smaller displacement engines, especially Japanese V-6s (I generally consider anything smaller than 300 cubic inches to be small). Even under wide open throttle, I would not consider this exhaust to be loud or annyoing and there is no resonance in the cab of the truck whatsoever. A buddy of mine has a 40 Series on his Tacoma (identical to mine), and I consider that to be loud and annoying. If you're looking for a quiet, yet powerful sounding muffler for this or a similar truck, you won't be disappointed by the Flowmaster 50 Series SUV. When you let off the throttle to maintain speed, it is barely louder than stock. I can only speak for the stock 2.25" pipes - don't know how much louder it would be with 2.5". Probably a little and I doubt that would be a bad thing with this muffler. As for fuel economy gains, I haven't had it on long enough to give a reliable report, but I'd guess that as with most free-flowing mufflers, it'll be 1-2 mpg. And for power differences, I didn't dyno the truck before or after, but I can say for sure that it is quicker to the redline under acceleration (quicker even than with just the intake alone), and combined with the Airaid intake I installed a couple of weeks ago, total RPM drop at 75 mph cruise in 5th gear (vs stock) was about 450 rpm. That should equal a very noticeable highway miles per gallon increase.

Similar Products Used:
Gibson, Dynomax, LC Engineering (on other vehicles)


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