Jacksonville = warm. Unclear is the entire inside the engine compartment air box intact so that the air comes from in front of core support?
At what ambient temperature were the Consult readings taken?
To measure cat back pressure you unscrew O2 [one at a time and fabricate adapter that has a 2-3 ' metal hose then a rubber hose to a 0-20 psi gauge inside car and drive it WOT and read pressures graph at 2,3,4,5 6,6.5k rpmMake your own find one or pay $$$
http://www.mytoolstore.com/toolaid/diagn04.html $35!
http://www.aeswave.com/product...&sa=Yh ... -tool.html
I've never had to do the test on a Q but here are some examples of back pressure which will vary as cat heats up:
http://www.se-r.net/header_exhaust/gene ... xhaust.php
"The car came to the shop way down on power, and with a number of misfire codes in the PCM. A swap of the plugs and wires fixed the misfire problems, but an initial dyno baseline run showed 110HP. Stock these cars should make about 165-170 at the tires, and this car had a number of upgrades already on the car. As we installed an o2 sensor bung in the exhaust system, we used the access to run a backpressure test on the exhaust system. This showed 36PSI of back pressure in the exhaust system at 6000k RPM. Removal of the system for testing let the engine make an expected 165HP. Cutting the cat open revealed a severely damaged and burnt core. After a replacement was sourced and installed, another run was made and again the car made good power. New baseline numbers with the parts already on the car were 194HP and 164TQ. After tuning, the car made 211HP and 175TQ""
Happens all the time.
My guess is somewhere around 10 psi at 6500 rpm on the Q with oem stock exhaust asmeasured at each O2 location.
However pull the exhaust and look at precats and cats with flashlight before you consider replacing them.
http://www.mattsauto.com/catdiags.htm for OBD2 cats