The car that I had seen the side exit exhausts was a friend of a friend's resto modded '55 Chevy shoebox. Car is essentially a modern Corvette mechanically, including the transverse lear spring independent rear suspension and LS9. The exhaust was almost completely hidden underneath the rocker panels, but pointed about 45 deg. towards the ground. Seems like a good way to go to avoid the whole gas tank relocation idea and the long piece of pipe over the rear axle. I hadn't considered the exhaust gas corrosion aspect, or the heating of the rear tires, but that I am less concerned about, as the car would be moving most of the time, and the airflow from the car moving should keep the heating of the tires down. Maybe best idea is to run the exhaust inside the rocker panels, but turned down, not out?
I am shoing my ignorance here, but I didn't know the AAR 'Cudas had side exhaust. I have only seen AAR 'Cudas inagazines, and never noticed. There are 'Cudas at the local shows, but they are all big blocks, Hemi "tribute" cars, or 340 six packs.
I have seen Laker pipes on some of the 40s-50s traditional hot rods, and they look great on them. I don't know if they would work well with our body types though. The traditional Thrush side pipes might work better, but I haven't seen them in a long time, and even then, they looked a little bid on the "heavy" side. Used to see a lot of side pipes on 1960s-early 1970s Corvettes.
Kostas
Kostas