I have been reading about exhaust back pressure. There is a lot of info out there to be gleaned. I just have a hard time trying to figure out why Kymco put such a small diameter tail pipe on the Like 200i. Back pressure eats up horsepower. This is a fact. When the exhaust valve opens, the piston has to push the gasses out. So if there is pressure to push against, hence "back pressure", the piston has to push harder and we loose hp. The right sized exhaust can create a low pressure area right at the exhaust valve at the right time because of the "pulse" from the last exhaust valve opening. The pulse has a low pressure right behind it. There is a lot of tuning to make this happen and changing RPMs messes it up so the manufacturers have to find a happy medium. The Kymco Like 200i has a tail pipe that has an ID of ~ 1/2". Tell me if my math is wrong, but 163 cc times 5000 rpms, divided by 2 (since it's a four stroke) = about 107 gallons of exhaust each minute. My garden hose at full tilt runs about 8-10 gallons per minute...I know air is thinner etc., but the velocity of that exhaust must create a bunch of back pressure. My Like has about 850 miles on it and it performs reasonably well, so I'm not about to start hacking up the exhaust...yet..., but I wonder how much hp is being wasted due to the pipe. If anyone knows how after market pipes work for the 200i, I would love to know so I can put this thought to bed.