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A magnaflow exhaust (which the guy at the shop said would sound awesome and add hp and trq), it sounded like a rice burner and I switched it back to stock the next day at a different shop at a cost of prob around 4 or 5 hundred total.
That's weird. I had a Magnaflow exhaust installed as well and my truck sounds nice. It's very quiet with just a tiny, noticeable rumble to the exhaust tone. Very quiet on trips too.
X2. Helped a buddy install a 5" magnaflow turboback stainless steel exhaust on his '05 CTD. Sounded like crap and droned him to death. He ended up reinstalling his cat and going with a Shuttleworth HD diesel muffler. NICE!A magnaflow exhaust (which the guy at the shop said would sound awesome and add hp and trq), it sounded like a rice burner and I switched it back to stock the next day at a different shop at a cost of prob around 4 or 5 hundred total.
Hmm, lets see. Spanning SUV's, sport compacts, and diesel pickups here goes (not all will apply here):
Intakes- Ive tried drop in, CAI, short ram, made from plastic, made from metal, several types of cone filters. None did much from what I could tell.
Exhaust- Loud exhaust gets tiring if you drive for very long. Sure, the 5" sewer pipe on my CTD sounded great when driving around town. Not so much driving 2, 3, 5, 10, 14 hours.
T-Bar re-index/general lift- too much wear for too little gain
Body Lift- Hate the gaps, no good way to relocate most bumpers.
Building armor- I built a complete set of sliders, and bumpers for a 91 Pathfinder. Hell for stout but way too time consuming. IF I ever armor up my X, ill buy rather than build.
Stereo systems/ Subs- Spent more money than I care to upgrading HU's, speakers, amps, and subs. Im happy with stock now.
I guess you could say that im pretty well finished with most "mods". And as luck would have it you eventually find yourself dumping tons of time, effort, and money into a vehicle that's on the fritz anyways. Then you end up losing out not only the value of the vehicle but all the parts you installed. Case in point, my old dodge. Purchased for $7000, spend $400 on new alternator 2 weeks after buying (used), spent $210 on lift pumps, spent $1500 on new injection pump, spent $3500 on a full transmission rebuild/build up. Then spent $500 on a programmer, $200 on an extra set of wheels, $400 on exhaust, $200 on aux lights. I spent more in parts + accessories than I did for the purchase price. Not counting basic maintainance and including the cost of the vehicle itself I put ~$14000 into the truck. Know what I got for it at the dealership? $1,000.
Oh, and dont mod your DD!
Aftermarket accessories that use SAE/inch hardware! It is a real pain to have to take a set of SAE tools just to work on your compressor or to adjust your driving lights. Are any cars still made with SAE? It is time to go all metric (actually it was time 20 years ago, but that is a different rant!).