For many years ski boats used nothing but USCG exhaust rated corrugated hose & straight pipes, in the 70's everyone began added a fiberglass muffler in-line. By the mid eighties the race was on to get the boats as quiet as possible & you saw a number of muffler styles. All Advance models have mufflers, with only a few built with them deleted per customer request. If your exhaust exits over the transmission mounts using the corrugated hose will work. Some, especially newer models the exhaust exits under the transmission mount & requires a much tighter bend & the hose won't make that. Today the issue leans toward which is more affordable, the USCG hose is very pricey, & the fiberglass tube looks more affordable. I've seen old inboards with copper elbows, hate to price those. I haven't seen what others are offering in the aftermarket world I have an assortment of 3.5" stuff around here but no 3". The operating temps inside the exhaust usually never exceeds 200deg. But when you begin to lose water pressure from a failing impeller these temps can reach 1,000deg. burning the rubber, resins etc. The smell will alert all but the dumbest operators (wakeboarders) that there's a serious problem. Will it start a fire, well some wakeboarders discovered that a fire is the secondary problem to the two 3" holes allowing lake water in through the burned out exhaust pipes & that amount of water will snuff out any fire as the boat goes to the bottom. Yes the resins used by the muffler manufacturers is different than what you can get at Autozone, they are high temp, fire retardant resins, but again if you keep the temps inside at 200 deg. or less near anything will work.