The first one seems to provide a smaller footprint, less pulley to put your feet into, but I don't think the skate bearings will be up the task, maybe using a belt tensioner from a car might be a better option, from some small 1.1 to 1.5l engine will be compact and have everything included(bearing, rolling surface, eccentric adjuster, spring/hydraulic tensioner) in a ready to mount piece with 2 or 3 bolts, the best part is that you get all that for 30-40€.
Belt tensioner from a car is a good idea, thanks!
The degrees of blowdown may remain the same but if you are widening the exhaust port, the blowdown STA increases, its the STA (Specific Time Area) that is important.
The timing of the exhaust port becomes important because of the all important pipe resonance reinforcement you get around 190-194 duration of the pressure waves in the pipe.
Last edited by breezy; 9th February 2015 at 06:20. Reason: not thinking ....
yeah sorry just edited post... does anyone know the dimention from the center of the front variator shaft( crankshaft) and the clucth wheel shaft on a piaggio zip 50cc 2t.
Last edited by breezy; 9th February 2015 at 06:26. Reason: relevent cvt question
From the 50cc pics its easy to see that you can get into the waterjacket and firstly bead blast then secondly metal spray the cast iron above the EX.
This works very well, we have been metal spraying the cast iron bore cylinder tops on KT100 Yamahas for years, then spraying the alloy fins as well to
get the rule book legal overall cylinder length dimension after machining the base to drop the port timings.
And its the effective port area you need to use ie is that 600mm2 times the down angle cosine ?
Ive got a thing thats unique and new.To prove it I'll have the last laugh on you.Cause instead of one head I got two.And you know two heads are better than one.
[QUOTE=adegnes;1130828775]Playing with the belt tensioner.
Whats better? Both pictures are with the variator in "low gear"
I don't know about variators, but if they were toothed or fixed pulleys, the first option would be the one, since it provides the belt with more wrap-around on each pulley
I would have thought no tensioner was appropriate as the moveable sheave increases and decreases the amount of belt needed as it moves in and out. That is how it works on my Polaris Sportsman 700 twin quad anyway.
https://www.google.com/search?q=pola...ms%3B480%3B360
Senso, now that you have cut your CRM50 cylinder, is it possible to measure the thickness of the sides of the exhaust port near the cylinder wall?
I am wondering how wide we can go at the top of the port before breaking through
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