Exhaust rattle exhaust broken what's a cheap fix??
Discussion
Hi,
I took the car into the garage after the exhaust made the blowing sounds and rattled. This is what is the issue:-
Pic 1 : Exhaust broken at the flange (mid to end section of exhaust) and resting on a bit of metal
Pic 2 : Exhaust hanger broke off so it's resting on another bit of metal
What's an easy/cheap fix for these issues? Kwik Fit wanted £300



I took the car into the garage after the exhaust made the blowing sounds and rattled. This is what is the issue:-
Pic 1 : Exhaust broken at the flange (mid to end section of exhaust) and resting on a bit of metal
Pic 2 : Exhaust hanger broke off so it's resting on another bit of metal
What's an easy/cheap fix for these issues? Kwik Fit wanted £300
Edited by PistonAFC on Wednesday 11th March 17:12
Just playing devil's advocate here.
Looking at that picture it is only really going to be sorted out properly by replacing the rusted through parts & £300 may well be the going rate.
Can you get the parts cheaper? Yes.
Can you do it yourself? Yes.
Is it worth the difference, well only you can answer that as I don't know your capabilities.
Just beware, if the car doesn't have long on the MOT you are going to need at least one brake pipe and others may well be in a similar condition.
There is also a lot of what could be significant corrosion there too, may be worth deciding how much the car is worth to you time.
Looking at that picture it is only really going to be sorted out properly by replacing the rusted through parts & £300 may well be the going rate.
Can you get the parts cheaper? Yes.
Can you do it yourself? Yes.
Is it worth the difference, well only you can answer that as I don't know your capabilities.
Just beware, if the car doesn't have long on the MOT you are going to need at least one brake pipe and others may well be in a similar condition.
There is also a lot of what could be significant corrosion there too, may be worth deciding how much the car is worth to you time.
_Rodders_ said:
Doing it yourself with pattern parts.
I doubt that can be saved economically.
Hanger could maybe be repaired (amount of rust depending) but that flange is done for, nothing left of it to repair and quite likely whatever it bolts too is also toast.I doubt that can be saved economically.
£300 doesn't sound too bad, obviously DIY could be cheaper but can you DIY?
PistonAFC said:
Hi,
I took the car into the garage after the exhaust made the blowing sounds and rattled. This is what is the issue:-
Pic 1 : Exhaust broken at the flange and resting on a bit of metal
Pic 2 : Exhaust hanger broke off so it's resting on another bit of metal
What's an easy/cheap fix for these issues? Kwik Fit wanted £300



The answer is going to depend slightly on which piece is which in the first image, if the part on the right is the middle section and the part on the left is the back box, then you can get away with a new back box, and a replacement bolt on clamp for the mid section, such as this: https://www.autodoc.co.uk/car-parts/holder-exhaust...I took the car into the garage after the exhaust made the blowing sounds and rattled. This is what is the issue:-
Pic 1 : Exhaust broken at the flange and resting on a bit of metal
Pic 2 : Exhaust hanger broke off so it's resting on another bit of metal
What's an easy/cheap fix for these issues? Kwik Fit wanted £300
If however, the part on the right is the back box, and the part on the left is the middle section, then you probably need the lot, and £300 is not bad price.
Megaflow said:
The answer is going to depend slightly on which piece is which in the first image, if the part on the right is the middle section and the part on the left is the back box, then you can get away with a new back box, and a replacement bolt on clamp for the mid section, such as this: https://www.autodoc.co.uk/car-parts/holder-exhaust...
If however, the part on the right is the back box, and the part on the left is the middle section, then you probably need the lot, and £300 is not bad price.
See this pic below - hope it clarifies.If however, the part on the right is the back box, and the part on the left is the middle section, then you probably need the lot, and £300 is not bad price.
I was thinking of asking a mechanic to do something like this to fix the flange:-
E-bmw said:
Just playing devil's advocate here.
Looking at that picture it is only really going to be sorted out properly by replacing the rusted through parts & £300 may well be the going rate.
Can you get the parts cheaper? Yes.
Can you do it yourself? Yes.
Is it worth the difference, well only you can answer that as I don't know your capabilities.
Just beware, if the car doesn't have long on the MOT you are going to need at least one brake pipe and others may well be in a similar condition.
There is also a lot of what could be significant corrosion there too, may be worth deciding how much the car is worth to you time.
The car is a 07 plate Toyota.Looking at that picture it is only really going to be sorted out properly by replacing the rusted through parts & £300 may well be the going rate.
Can you get the parts cheaper? Yes.
Can you do it yourself? Yes.
Is it worth the difference, well only you can answer that as I don't know your capabilities.
Just beware, if the car doesn't have long on the MOT you are going to need at least one brake pipe and others may well be in a similar condition.
There is also a lot of what could be significant corrosion there too, may be worth deciding how much the car is worth to you time.
Car recently passed MoT in December - I'll give the brake pipes a bit of a wire brush and Waxoyl like I did a few years ago when they looked similar. The corrosion is more surface, car is pretty solid and mechanic only advised on "Front Coil spring mounting corroded but not seriously weakened shocker", he said just wire brush and waxoyl it and it should pass next MoT.
My proposed fix to Pic 1 the broken flange between the end and mid sections is:-
which would save the ORIGINAL exhaust.
My fix for Pic 2 the missing hangar is to wrap a clothes wire hanger around the exhaust and "tie" it into the rubber mount that it still there.
I don't think you could use the repair section in Pic 1 because each end of that exhaust is flared/curved. I think it would leak quite badly and/or not be enough length to get a decent connection. There is a limit to how much exhaust repair paste you can use before it just crumbles up etc.
For pic 2 (the hanger), if you have the broken bit it could be welded really quickly/easily and you don't need a ramp, just lift it a reasonable amount.
For pic 2 (the hanger), if you have the broken bit it could be welded really quickly/easily and you don't need a ramp, just lift it a reasonable amount.
paul_c123 said:
I don't think you could use the repair section in Pic 1 because each end of that exhaust is flared/curved. I think it would leak quite badly and/or not be enough length to get a decent connection. There is a limit to how much exhaust repair paste you can use before it just crumbles up etc.
For pic 2 (the hanger), if you have the broken bit it could be welded really quickly/easily and you don't need a ramp, just lift it a reasonable amount.
The hanger is easy with this sort of thing. For pic 2 (the hanger), if you have the broken bit it could be welded really quickly/easily and you don't need a ramp, just lift it a reasonable amount.
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