Greg, Leave the original system. Save your money. I had been down that route like so many others. Do it if you have lots of, money time and patience. Read on if you would like my experiences. I did a lot of research to find a custom exhaust and muffler shop. A decent sum of money was allocated for this project -- within a reasonable price range. Many shops refused to tackle the project regardless of the money. I live in NYC and the closest facility everyone recommended (including other custom installers) was in the Princeton, NJ area some, some 70 plus miles away. A shop in Princeton decides that they can handle it. Since the DeLorean is not a common vehicle, my car was a "first" for them. While I was down there the first day, I met an ex-DeLorean owner. I think his last name was Mr. Fleming. He had sold his DeLorean that he own for 14 years and purchased a Porsche 911 turbo, a track car and is not street legal. The Porsche was impressive. It was towed in on a flat bed and he was having a "special" exhaust system installed. He said he had out grown the DeLorean and wanted "more speed and performance." He is now running this track Porsche to live his dreams. Anyway, back to the muffler saga. The first choice, was a Borla muffler. The Borla Company doesn't have a muffler to the specs or configuration to fit the DeLorean (this was back in October 1998). A muffler would have to be made up, CUSTOM ORDER -- COSTLY (I could buy a muffler for my Bentley) and you would had to wait (Borla was swamp, and could not deliver on time.) Rob from PJ Grady has one on his green car with his own designed custom headers. His custom headers are no longer available. The second choice was the Flowmaster muffler. It has no packing material, it has baffles and we decided that this would be the one. Next were the connecting pipes and other components. They had to be engineered or selected and to be installed by cutting and welding. After the installation of the system, the results? The difference in the performance was NOT worth it. Incidentally, Rob had been down that road too. I found that out, later on and it was too late. Getting back to the Flowmaster and its system. Here are the problems. Getting it right, was a trying some experience. The first time the system was together, the system produced a high pitch ring, it was a tinny sound from the exhaust tips. The tips were replaced with two "custom performance tips" which eliminated this dilemma. Next the system had a "burble" effect on deceleration, wimpy sound with an unusual engine behavior -- lost of power. To resolve that problem, they had to remove the muffler and insert small choke collars in the outlets necks to create a resistance at the outlets, this was the Flowmaster engineers' suggestions. This got rid of the burble, but it "choked" the system. This choking resulted right back to the original performance. Well, there goes the performance we were hoping to get. The next problem was the cabin's resonance -- internal pressure generated by the engine and the exhaust system. The resonance coupled the interior of the car. WOW. This internal pressure on long drives can be irritating if not tiring and trying some. The feeling is a heavy pressure on your chest -- After three months of daily driving, which is 3 to 4 hours a day, I had this system removed and installed the original factory system. Anyway, I spent over a thousand-dollar on this failed project. The system was a dual separate manifold pipes, dual cats, dual pipes to the Flowmaster muffler, dual exhaust tail pipes. This system has been sitting in my basement for over a year, anyone interested? Make me an offer. Bottom line? WASTE OF TIME AND MONEY. I believe the best or the better method for exhausting the DeLorean is the "header manifold" that our British DeLorean owners are using. I understand it is a good system, but we in the USA, we MUST have a catalytic converter, which must be included and fitted into the DeLorean (some states requires original system and no modification allowed). Remember that the problem is room and the sizes of all the components that need to be fitted. I think the British law doesn't require cats, so they have the room for a different set up which also help improve the performance, lucky them. Kayo Ong #05508 Lic 9D NY