Endless pointless arguing.......if twins were capable of higher power outputs then why are they slowly slipping away in superbikes and supersports, and not visible at all in motogp.....hang on i know......fucken obviousFOURS RULE![]()
Endless pointless arguing.......if twins were capable of higher power outputs then why are they slowly slipping away in superbikes and supersports, and not visible at all in motogp.....hang on i know......fucken obviousFOURS RULE![]()
ITS CRANK ANGLE YOUR TALKING ABOUT , THE TRX FIRES LIKE A V TWIN, AND A MOTOGP BIKE FIRES ANYWAY THEY WANT ACCORDING TO CRANK PLANE ANGLES AND CAMSHAFT CONFIGURATIONOriginally Posted by TwoSeven
like to piont out also that Having ridden a TDR250, Cagiva Vraptor and Kawasaki ZX6r back to back that all this torque is pants. The TDR was the most fun under the limit, to have the same fun on the zx you had to be going much much faster and the vtwin cagiva was fun at low speeds too as you just sat there listening to the engine.
All fun in there own way. remember a bke can have no torque (2 strokes) no power (125cc sports) and look like crap (TDR250) but they are all still fun.
The real mystery is how come that fat bastard Hurley has never lost any weight.
And this is what my testing method displaysOriginally Posted by Ixion
Two stroke twins ruleOriginally Posted by unhingedlizard
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This talk of peak torque in a VERY narrow band made me think of F5Dave's bucket for some reason. Very peaky power can be used, it's just a bit hard on the clutch. Also I raced agains't a guy with a bike that made way more power than mine but in a narrow band. When he was "in-the-zone" he walked away from me but inbetween times I could pull him back.Originally Posted by Ixion
This thread has been hijacked good and proper.![]()



OK so what's the suposed 0-60 of a rocket
AND THIS GUY KNOWS HIS BUCKETS BETTER THAN MOSTOriginally Posted by speedpro
Originally Posted by WINJA
June "Bike" magazine compares 2005 999R with R1.
999R 79.8 lb @ 7800rpm 138.6 bhp
R1 72.1 lb @ 9900rpm , 151.8 bhp.
The mazagine plots the torque of both , the 999 has it over the R1 up to it's red line. At 7000 rpm the Duke is making 20 % more torque and 20bhp more power , this slowly flatens of to the Dukes redline at with point the R1 bhp comes through in BHP only.
Interesting enough , Matt's stock MV 750 and my Ducati 748R were ploted on the same dyno , Matts old bike made more power and torque right through the rev range. I don't remember the torque figures , but I think in RW BHP it was 114 to 104. I'm running RS race cams , race exhaust with drops the torque in the lower rev range. Ended up with 110 bhp once a more suited chip was installed,The Vtwin was still short in both BHP and Torque compared to Matt's inline 4.
It's not a beer pot.... It's a fuel tank for a sex machine
Trip of a life time http://www.buenosaires-caracas.com.ar/tours.html
Trip details here
Can you buy this 'torque' in a can or bottle, how much of it should I put in my engine?

More cylinders equals more power. A 750 inline 4 compares favourably with a 1000cc twin.
Remember the superbike rules around ten years or so ago. The only reason Ducati's had so much success was because the rules were biased in theirfavour. But it must have been great for Honda's development as their 750's were keeping up. But honda was running a V4 at the time.
Looking at current MotoGP engines there isn't any difference between a V4 or an inline four except maybe in weight distribution.
For an extreme compare a single cylinder with a multi of the same style and displacement.
Anyone built a Diesel bike? They would have good torque but no power.
Heres an interesting link I stumbled upon a while back .
http://www.maclean-nj.com/2002motogpengines.htm
The Bandit did 76 ft lbs at 8000 rpm on AMPS Dynojet dyno.
And remember that all dynos vary. So do roll ons, if you're 120 kilos you'll struggle against some Japanese racing snake on the same bike.
BTW, how about posting actual dyno figures you've SEEN, not rehashing magazine figures.
Speed doesn't kill people.
Stupidity kills people.
I'll say it again. I don't want it brought up again.Originally Posted by unhingedlizard
1. Two Strokes produce waaay more torque than four strokes of the same capacity and number of cylinders. It is the torque curve shape that is different.
2. Torque is a measurement of a twisting moment. When you wake up in the morning with an erection, push down on it and lift your feet off the floor. The force generated to lift your feet off the floor is torque.
Horsepower is a function of revs, torque is generated by rotating mass. Engines are at their most efficient at peak torque.
If a man is alone in the woods and there isn't a woke Hollywood around to call him racist, is he still white?
85 lb/ft of torque at 6000 rpm, in the old money...
Do I win anything?
"Standing on your mother's corpse you told me that you'd wait forever." [Bryan Adams: Summer of 69]
AND ACCORDING TO TOYOTA THEIR 2.4 PETROL HIACE HAS FAR MORE TORQUE AND HORSEPOWER EVERYWHERE COMPARED TO THEIR OWN 3.0 DIESELOriginally Posted by Jim2
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