I have only done 4 or 5 SBP Xchamber builds but never have liked the hose stuff.
Sorry Paul, I know the reason is so we can route and tune the pipe and copper is easy to cut, but I just haven't ever been able to make the old blue and new black stuff work or look good.
I have heard of two things that are supposed to work.
1. You can do a hybrid solder/braze with a propane torch on the copper/steel joints if you use Silver solder.
2. JB weld in and outside the seams. I figure a nice JB weld blanket around all the copper on to the real pipes might be great.
Again, I haven't tried either, but plan to so I'll share.
The REAL trick with any Xchamber is how to route it and where to anchor it.
The SBP's are big pipes that can't just rely on the cylinder mount alone.
I bring that up because I have a local customers bike here that he started an
extreme build on, and ran into way more mechanical problems than he expected for his second build so he brought it to me.
He had 3 boxes of all top quality parts and got a really good start, but his bike is full suspension and he put a NuVinci hub in. That is not important though, the point is the back end is full suspension so from the BB back there is no place for a back pipe mount that didn't move.
Long story short he bought a one-piece Xchamber too but it
literally stuck out like a sore thumb that the pedals hit by 1.5", and final output right up against the BB.
I took the SBP perfectly port matched first piece and the one piece other Xchamber up to my great little welding shop around the corner, had them hack off the crappy fixed small flange on that one piece pipe, and weld the SBP part on it so it aligned exactly where I wanted it.
A little high temp silver motor paint on the $20 fitting/welding and the sacrifice of the SBP flange it works for this build.
Paul, can anyone buy just your perfect port matched initial mount piece?
Can I at least buy another one so the rest of this new pipe can be used (please)?
I will attest to this, I have used a few of each type of pipe, and though SBP's is bigger and requires more work to mount and tune, they sure kick ass performance wise over the one piece cheap ones... IF you do it right.
if you are a rookie looking for just 'a little more', the one piece pipes are your speed, but if you have the skills and want the most, you can't beat SBP's pipe performance and adjustable tuning.