My exhaust consists of Hooker long tubes, Hooker front y-pipe(no pre-cats), Random Tech main cat, and Flowmaster catback. I have never failed emissions testing with this set up. The Random Tech cat improves performance and keeps me passing emissions all at the same time.
That depends on what brand you go with (Hooker, TPIS, Hedman, Lingenfelter, ect.) and if you get them ceramic coated or not. Some come with a y-pipe and some do not.I got my Hooker's with ceramin coating for about $500 from summitracing.com. They are part# hok-2151-1. TPIS are more expensive because they come with a front y-pipe. I agree with Mad-Mic. Don't waste your time with the shorties. They are basically performance manifolds.
The
pros of long tubes are a better exhaust note (depending on the rest of your exhaust) and a noticeable gain in HP(depending on the rest of your set up). Depending on the brand, spark plug changing is a snap. On a stock height Vette (not lowered) ground clearance is not even an issue as some make it seem to be. The
cons are that no long tube headers are emissions legal, and can be a long project if you have never installed long tubes before, expensive if you have a shop install them for you, and you will need a difference front y-pipe. That exhaust system you seen at MAD will only work if you keep your stock headers or buy shorties (not worth the time and money) becuase of the front y-pipe beeing the stock style.
Now about Catalytic converters. TPIS sells Random Technology high flow cats. The
pros are that you can do away with the pre cats(more HP) because it will do a good job of cleaning up the exhast by itself before it leaves the tailpipes, they rob very little HP, they are emission legal in all 50 states, and will give a better exhaust note along with long tubes. The
cons are that they run about $220 a piece.
The total cost of my entire exhaust was about $1000. I installed it myself and saved at least $550.