What s the motor? 2-4 stroke? For on or off road use?
Past that, there is a bunch of youtube but more info is needed.
Whats the motor? Does it have an exhaust already, or compleatly new exhaust is needed.
An old one could be copied or fixed.
2 strokes need a tune pipe, Im not sure, but I sorta know it needs to be made in a specific manner.
In order to properly design a tuned pipe for such an engine requires some really freaky mathematics. Designed wrong, it won't help at all, and might even hurt performance.
A two-stroke does not require a tuned pipe. We've got a well-respected member here that has gotten more out of a 2-stroke mower engine than any of us might have expected- and he's doing just fine with a simple megaphone-type open pipe.

Now that is what i call help, so will the pipe say around the same diameter and not be crushed when i bend it?Man, its really simple. I would mark the area(s) you want to bend and take a good mental picture. Now, there is 2 ways I tackle such a job,1st torch and box wrench(easier) 2nd just a box wrench and cheat pipe. ON BOTH methods, i fill the pipe with play sand! Pack it tight! Very important. .... Method 2, with pipe packed with sand(tape up ends to keep sand inside) at the first mark, put your box end wrench with the open end above the directly over the directionyou want to go. UUsing cheater pipe,start your bend a little. Move your wrench over a little at a time and bend a little at a time. DO NOT RUSH and you can get a nice bend and pretty tight too if its not too big in diameter. The wrench will leave little marks on the pipe but you can file or grind smooth fairly easy. It is easier to heat it up with a torch, but YOU CAN DO MORE DAMGE THAN GOOD if you heat it too much. I have a BIG 1&5/8 wrench i "custom" ground for the torch method. I do not suggest you try it, its merely what i do.... Even without a torch, you can do a decent bend.
You could also buy another used stock exhaust and do a custom cut and weld job. That way you still have a stocker for the quad. If your exhaust has an expansion chamber(big funny shaped bubble part), you're gonna NOT mess with anything before it. AFTER it drops back to the small diameter pipe, its KINDA free game as long as you dont get too wild with it...Hope that helps....Ummm so its clear.... The pipe has to be able to go through the box end of the wrench. And as you bend, the wrench slides over the top and stays put at the bottom. Making small side steps, is how you keep a tight bend.... be patient and find a practice piece of pipe....
There's an exhaust calculator to properly design the stages if you have the all the engine info it needs.
I attached it just in case you want to give it a try
View attachment 39293
'sid
PS if you google for "exhaust calculator" you may find some more info on that, the original website seems to be offline I'm afraid
ok thanks i will combine yours andMan, its really simple. I would mark the area(s) you want to bend and take a good mental picture. Now, there is 2 ways I tackle such a job,1st torch and box wrench(easier) 2nd just a box wrench and cheat pipe.
UUsing cheater pipe,start your bend a little. Move your wrench over a little at a time and bend a little at a time. DO NOT RUSH and you can get a nice bend and pretty tight too if its not too big in diameter.
Yes , if youre patient, go slow and make little bends at a time,the pipe will not crush. The sand packed inside will help keep it all round. If you get in a hurry, you WILL dimple or crease/crush the pipe wall. A cheater pipe is just something used to add leverage to the end of the wrench. This makes it easier to be more in control of how much you bend at a time.
**** bro, you didnt say you had a bender! Yes, pack with sand, bend it using the bender. Being that is already an exhuast system, you might have difficulties in positioning....
The sand trick has been around for years.