Pat, (Framingsilly), was nice enough to come over yesterday and do a compression test on Howie's engine. 120 on #2, #3 & #4 and 110 on #1. That's very good news, but still that thing sounds awful.
Pat pointed out a spot to Howie that could be troublesome, but after using some "Howie approved repair material", aka duct tape, it didn't even muffle the horrible racket. Time to look elsewhere.
By the time Josh got there we decided to really take a closer look at the head connections. Bingo. My earlier concern about #1 was confirmed by Josh. They didn't weld the "J" pipe, (Ted is right. It's actually an "F" pipe), all the way around when installing, so there's a leak at the top of that pipe. I stuck my hand up by the #3 exhaust port with the engine running and the connection was like a hot air fan!
These pipes look pretty good, but we all know looks are deceiving. Were hoping some new gaskets may help, so were going to remove it, weld up any of the leaks that are repairable and see if some new gaskets help.
I told Howie the best fix is the right fix. That means 72-74 HE's, stock pipes & connections and a new muffler. For now, that's not going to happen, so we'll see what we can accomplish with what we've got.
Here's a look at Uncle Howie's Spaghetti Warehouse exhaust system.
We thought this junction just before the muffler could be the source of our leak, but it's not.
Here's how #3 & #4 exit the head.

Here's the #1 & #2 side. You can see that weld line just after #1 exhaust. It's leaking on top of that connection because they didn't go all the way around with the weld.

There's a psuedo crossover pipe that runs from #1/#2 over to #3/#4. NOTE: This bus has the underside cooling tin removed, but the muffler heat deflector shield is still there!

It may not matter at this point because Howie doesn't have heater boxes or all the engine tin, but the thermostat is definitely not working.

While these things appear tight, we've got leaks. I hope it's the gaskets.

Howie's going to PB blast them for a few days so I don't break a stud.
