OK, I can understand your reluctance to increase the power of your FJR. For you guys, the bike has plenty. Looking at it in the view of air pollution is certainly admirable. Fortunately (or unfortunately as the case may be) we aren't all the same. If some of us didn't want more power or better handling or newer styling, we'd all be riding Honda 305s (or maybe Vincent Black Shadows, which might not be a bad thing).How exactly does one develope a performance exhaust without dyno runs??? "Sounds incredible" doesn't automatically equate to more power. <_< <_< <_<I'm sorry girls, however, a power farkle on a bike with 120+RWHP is about as useful as tits on a Bull.
And like Toecutter and Skippy, I don't see the attraction to creating more pollution for a couple hp on a bike that already has plenty.
The major impetus for building the pipe was to improve the midrange of the bike, take off some weight, and help the bike to run cooler. It scores on all three points.
On the pollution front, removing the cat from 100 FJRs will have the same effect on air quality in the US as about three cow farts. Truth be told, when the California Air Resources Board first proposed smog equipment on motorcycles in the 80's, a study by the EPA concluded it would provide NO measurable improvement in air quality whatsoever due to the small number of motorcycles in relataion to cars and other gross polluters. The study went on to say that CARB should implement the regulations so as to get control over the motorcycle industry. So you can look at the smog crap on your bike as just another power grab by our government.
Of course you are free to have your own opinion of more power or more pollution just as others on this board are free to have theirs.