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Thread: ESE's works engine tuner

  1. #19096
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    20th July 2010 - 07:56
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    Quote Originally Posted by Tim Ey View Post
    If this is a Malossi MHR Cylinder have a close look at the outer Boostports. And at the B Ports.
    The Malossi Cylinder I know has a B-Port without a Kicker (because the studs are right where the kicker would be on a modern cylinder). The outer boostport is doing the kicker-work.
    No not a Maloosi, and no the 3 x C port (boost ports) are not doing the job of clearing out spent combustion gas under the incoming charge. The C ports are all angled very steeply up to the head. This cylinder has B ports with the hook to do this job.

    Quote Originally Posted by Tim Ey View Post
    So I would go on Option C: leave it as it came frome the Box ;-) Perhaps make the liner between the ports a bit shallower but nothing more.
    No I couldn't do that. There is so much opportunity for performance gain with these cylinders.


    Quote Originally Posted by mr bucketracer View Post
    Maybe I should have just spent the extra money
    Looks like the Malossi MHR II team is as per my option 1. Can anyone tell me what angle those ports are angled up at?

  2. #19097
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    8th February 2007 - 20:42
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    Kel, I would grind the divider between the B/C ports so that all it does is support the ring,ie only a short bridge with a radius on the front ( inner face )
    with both walls perpendicular to the bore C L.
    Maybe the rear wall of the B port can be filled to make it perp, if it has a hook now, but I cant see what happens on the front wall of the C port at all,so
    maybe you can leave the divider in ,just make both walls perp to the bore CL.
    Then flatten the D roof and put the rear wall hook into that.
    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.

  3. #19098
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    12th March 2010 - 16:56
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    Quote Originally Posted by lodgernz View Post
    I'm struggling to see how a piston moving through a ring fixed to the bore is any different from a piston with no ring in a cylinder with no ring, as in model engines.
    As I understand it, rings on a conventional piston force outwards on the bore, providing a seal that the piston alone is incapable of providing, given tolerances to allow for expansion differences etc. etc..
    It seems to me that a ring sitting in the bore would similarly need to be forced inwards on to the piston to provide the equivalent seal.
    I can't see how this is possible without the piston crashing into the ring as it returns to the ring which has sprung inwards while the piston was elsewhere.
    And then there is Harry's suggestion/hint/teaser that the piston doesn't touch the ring(s) anyway...
    The ring is stationary, no inertia no matter what speed. Gas pressure would still be able to squeeze the ring in, like normal just the other way round, could even be small holes from combustion chamber to the back of the ring? Maybe. Ring would have to be well supported so it can only move in "a knats cock" smaller than the piston when the piston is not there. Could it be any worse than in our normal engines with the ring bulging out of its groove every time it passes the exhaust port. Twice every cycle the ring has to be shoved back into it's groove by a small champher in the exhaust port, the ring in the side of the cylinder wall would have to move less than that. Latest ring technology has it that there is not much spring pressure (movement) in the ring when its loose on the piston, out of the cylinder. I know it sounds crazy but what else?
    If the rings never touch the piston, then they are not piston rings

  4. #19099
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    So now you are going to put Nicasil on the piston skirt to take the sealing load of the gas compressed ring.
    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.

  5. #19100
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    20th January 2010 - 14:41
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    I can remember the actual figure, but engine friction rises at a cube or square to engine speed.
    Inertia increases at a square of rpm
    So something slippery is at foot.
    I think we need to get our lab coats on.

    Al-Si-graphite particle composite piston
    http://www.sciencedirect.com/science...43164880902598
    9% less friction...........
    CRC Handbook of Lubrication and Tribology, Volume III: Monitoring ..., Volume 3 pg 165
    10% HP increase in passanger an racin car engines
    Scuffing resistance increase by a factor of two.
    Tested and used in F1

    Rods
    50% lighter than steel 25%lighter than Ti no bearing.
    http://www.mxcomposites.com/faq.php
    Quote Originally Posted by Katman View Post
    I reminder distinctly .




    Kinky is using a feather. Perverted is using the whole chicken

  6. #19101
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    Quote Originally Posted by wobbly View Post
    So now you are going to put Nicasil on the piston skirt to take the sealing load of the gas compressed ring.
    Yes or something better
    It's just the same but the other way round

  7. #19102
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    18th May 2007 - 20:23
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    Click image for larger version. 

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    What is this head ... could it be a variable compression head????? Help Please.

  8. #19103
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    5th April 2013 - 13:09
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    Polini made that. It lowers compression as cylinder pressure goes up. Yzr500 had that for one or two years.

    I'd like to buy one of these Polini heads if anyone knows of one for sale. Preferably cr125 model

  9. #19104
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    Quote Originally Posted by jonny quest View Post
    Polini made that. It lowers compression as cylinder pressure goes up. Yzr500 had that for one or two years.

    I'd like to buy one of these Polini heads if anyone knows of one for sale. Preferably cr125 model
    Gee that was hard
    http://www.ebay.it/itm/111695470713

    Quote Originally Posted by TZ350 View Post
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    What is this head ... could it be a variable compression head????? Help Please.
    Quote Originally Posted by husaberg View Post
    Oh Frits But i would not have been so concise or eloquent though.
    The Aprilia was still fairly high. I think either you or Jan wrote is was always generally 16:1 or similar is that right?
    Did this vary say higher tight tracks lower open tracks, or was the comp just optimised for the best hp/acceration/over rev compromise at the circuit.

    I remember the Poloni power head From Robinsons book did anyone ever use it in competition

    Is there anything in the other bits i observed or have i drifted off on a tangent?
    Quote Originally Posted by Frits Overmars View Post
    The compression ratio was always between 15.5 and 16, optimized on the test bench. No adaption to weather, tracks etc. At least not officially; what individual mechanics got up to, was beyond control. But such actions certainly were not recommended.

    Not at Aprilia. I seem to remember that Team Roberts once tried variable comp heads on the factory Yamaha 500s, but the name Poloni does not ring a bell.
    Quote Originally Posted by husaberg View Post
    I spelt it wrong too i guess "Polini" powerhead

    pretty sure the year Wayne Rainey was injured they were using it then.
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    Quote Originally Posted by Katman View Post
    I reminder distinctly .




    Kinky is using a feather. Perverted is using the whole chicken

  10. #19105
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    Edit: damn you husa!


  11. #19106
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    Quote Originally Posted by Frits Overmars View Post
    Ken, you might like to know that you gave Harry a good scare! For some reason, although he is logged in, he can't see the pictures here. So he could not see the way you were pulling his leg; all he saw was your disturbing text about another competitor.
    Mental Trousers, are you there? I promised Harry to bring his problem to your attention. He logs in which seems to work because he gets the message "welcome Ryger" or words to that effect, but he cannot see any pictures and he cannot post anything. The two-stroke world is depending on you, Shane!
    Tell him to clear out the cookies in his browser and try again.

    What's his login name?
    Zen wisdom: No matter what happens, somebody will find a way to take it too seriously. - obviously had KB in mind when he came up with that gem

    Artificial intelligence is no match for natural stupidity

  12. #19107
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mental Trousers View Post
    Tell him to clear out the cookies in his browser and try again.

    What's his login name?
    I am picking its Ryger
    http://www.kiwibiker.co.nz/forums/me...hp/48608-ryger
    Quote Originally Posted by Katman View Post
    I reminder distinctly .




    Kinky is using a feather. Perverted is using the whole chicken

  13. #19108
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    21st August 2014 - 13:28
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    Quote Originally Posted by Frits Overmars View Post
    The compression ratio was always between 15.5 and 16, optimized on the test bench. No adaption to weather, tracks etc. At least not officially; what individual mechanics got up to, was beyond control. But such actions certainly were not recommended.
    are these compression ratios for unleaded?

    what was the range for leaded on the dyno?

  14. #19109
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    Quote Originally Posted by crbbt View Post
    are these compression ratios for unleaded? what was the range for leaded on the dyno?
    Unleaded has been compulsory in GP-racing for decades.

  15. #19110
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mental Trousers View Post
    Tell him to clear out the cookies in his browser and try again.
    Will do, thanks.

    What's his login name?
    I suppose it's Ryger, like Husa suggested.

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