What Does A Glasspack Do? - Performance Forum - J
Maybe your like
- Home
- Forums
- Forum Home
- Forum Search
- General Stuff
- General
- Jacked / Wrecked / Sold
- Newbies
- Maintenance & Repair
- Sales / GP
- Show & Shine
- Exterior
- Interior
- Wheel & Tire
- Audio & Electronics
- Photos & Media
- Go Go Go
- Performance
- Nitrous Oxide
- Boost
- Tuning
- Transmission
- Suspension & Brake
- Racing
- Generations
- First Gen (1982 - 1987)
- Second Gen (1988 - 1994)
- Third Gen (1995 - 2005)
- Stuff To Do
- Events
- J-Body Meets
- Local and Regional
- Regional Forums
- Not Exactly J-Body
- Other Cars
- Image Manipulation
- Politics & War
- Off Topic
- Library
- FAQ
- Library
- Events Calendar
- Gallery
- Product Guide
- IRC Chat
- Links
- Store
- Classifieds
- Members
- Member Search
- Register Now
- Register Log In
- Home /
- Forums /
- Performance Forum /
- What does a glasspack do?
What does a glasspack do? - Performance Forum
Forum Post / Reply You must log in before you can post or reply to messages.- Forum Home
- Thread List
- Previous Message
- Next Message
Re: What does a glasspack do? Saturday, March 18, 2006 9:33 AM ln2johnny What people usually do is put the glasspack between the cat and the muffler. Just the glasspack alone will be a little loud but it'll be smooth. The muffler will make it quiet. Or atleast that's the going trend. I don't have a glasspack on mine, just an HKS muffler and other than an unknown mystery rattle, my car just sounds mean when I get on it. Quiet and smooth when it's at idle or cruise, barely louder than stock.
2007 GM Tuner Bash...HELL YEA PA,MD,NJ,DE,NY and all states north caravan Re: What does a glasspack do? Saturday, March 18, 2006 12:03 PM 2.4 CavaWeir (a.k.a. jiggamon) technically a resonator is not equal to a glasspack. A resonator is a tube within a tube and there is no fiberglass packing to absorb sound. There are three ways of quieting an exhaust. One is absorption, another is reflection, and the third is through velocity reduction. A chambered muffler does the third...it has a large chamber in it that slows the velocity of the exhaust gases allowing them to die out. A muffler with angled baffles (flowmaster) quiets using reflection. The sound waves are diverted by the baffles and cancel each other out. This is the most restrictive of the three. A muffler with fiberglass packing or steel wool quiets via absorption. A glasspack uses the absorption method. It has a straight through core with perforations or louvers in it to allow sound waves to be absorbed by the packing. A true resonator is a chamber type muffler. There is a tube inside to keep exhaust gases flowing towards the output, however the case is larger and the area between the core and the case allows the gases to expand a bit and slow down, thus allowing certain frequencies to die out and not continue on. Absorption mufflers usually do not quiet the exhaust as well as a chambered muffler, however chambered and baffled mufflers disturb the exhaust flow so much that they are not the best performing mufflers. Most stock mufflers are chambered. A glasspack can be placed between the cat and muffler to allow more sound absorption with minimal flow impedance. So you lose some of the frequencies of sound and don't disturb the flow. If you use a louvered core glasspack, the louvers do disrupt the path of the exhaust gases, so there is some power loss there compared to the perforated core glasspack. I just wanted to post a little bit about how a glasspack is not technically a resonator and I ended up rambling on. Sorry about that. I have used glasspacks where the resonator should go and they work very well in reducing raspiness in exhausts and really mellowing out the tone. -da chinchilla - This Forum
- All Forums
Start New Topic Advanced Search
- General Stuff
- General
- Jacked / Wrecked / Sold
- Newbies
- Maintenance & Repair
- Sales / GP
- Show & Shine
- Exterior
- Interior
- Wheel & Tire
- Audio & Electronics
- Photos & Media
- Go Go Go
- Performance
- Nitrous Oxide
- Boost
- Tuning
- Transmission
- Suspension & Brake
- Racing
- Generations
- First Gen (1982 - 1987)
- Second Gen (1988 - 1994)
- Third Gen (1995 - 2005)
- Stuff To Do
- Events
- J-Body Meets
- Local and Regional
- Regional Forums
- GME
- GM Enthusiast Network
- J-Body Organization
- Ecotec Power
- GM Delta
- CONTACT US
- LEGAL
Copyright © 1999 - 2026 GM Enthusiast Network GM Enthusiast Network is not affiliated with the General Motors Corporation
×Site Log In
Username Password Remember my login on this computer.Forgot your username or password?
Log In × CloseTag » What Does A Glasspack Do
-
Glasspack - Wikipedia
-
Advantages And Disadvantages Of A Glasspack Muffler - CarsDirect
-
Glasspack Mufflers 101: Sound, Power Gain & Are They Legal?
-
What Is A Glasspack®? (with Picture) - WikiMotors
-
Everything You Should Know About Glasspack Mufflers
-
What Is A Glasspack Muffler? - Jalopy Talk
-
What Is A Glass Pack? - Car, Truck And Vehicle How To Guides
-
Cherry Bomb® Glasspack Vs. Straight Exhaust Pipe - 5.3L Chevy
-
How Long Do Glasspacks Last? - VEHQ
-
What Is A Cherry Bomb Muffler? Are Cherry Bomb Mufflers Legal?
-
What A Glassspack Muffler Is & Sounds Like - AutoAnything
-
Cherry Bomb Glasspack Mufflers
-
Backpressure And Other Types Of Mufflers - Auto | HowStuffWorks