Nothing special.
Pretty much the stock hangers up front.(back to the Cat.) We have the exhaust exit in front of the R.R. tire, held up by a couple of those universal clamp on rubber strap hangers that are available at any auto parts store.
Ours is solid mounted as well, but only to the power train. The chassis see different kinds of flexing compared to the power train, and that's where your issues will pop up.
Ours is solid mounted as well, but only to the power train. The chassis see different kinds of flexing compared to the power train, and that's where your issues will pop up.
you are saying that all mounts and bushings are non flexable (either steel or heim/flex)? how much vibration does that transmit? of course those vibrations could be the least of your worries
Nothing special.
Pretty much the stock hangers up front.(back to the Cat.) We have the exhaust exit in front of the R.R. tire, held up by a couple of those universal clamp on rubber strap hangers that are available at any auto parts store.
The exhaust routing we used probably isn't what you'd want to use on a trail rig. The pipe is just turned out behind the muffler, straight under the frame and out the side. Exits about a foot and a half forward of the rear tire. As the truck never sees anything like trail obstacles, we don't have to worry about the pipe getting crushed on a rock. To be honest, it could be tucked up 2 or 3 inches. The best pic I have of the at side of the truck only shows the tip. No shots of the under truck exhaust piping.
For what it's worth, here's a side shot
For a trail rig, I'd keep the full length pipe and run it out the back. Too many rocks, stumps, etc manage to peal everything off below the rockers.