I had issues with a 1-2mm wide iron bridge between aux and main before. This was an application where I had to make the aux tight to the main because of stud bore constraints. It overheated the bridge. I did not have oil holes drilled.
I had issues with a 1-2mm wide iron bridge between aux and main before. This was an application where I had to make the aux tight to the main because of stud bore constraints. It overheated the bridge. I did not have oil holes drilled.
i always put oil holes in the piston for any type of exh bridge. also i grind a resorvoir into the liner below the bridge so it fills with oil at tdc then the piston walls carry the oil over the bridge on the next cycle. 1mm isnt much surface area and more than anything i figure they will wear down faster and perhaps maybe crack. only one way to find out![]()
Holes in piston, channels.... for oil may help at idle.
Full song, full heat, they are doing anything
Yes , in the Aprilia and the TM the piston skirt pushes on tongues each side below the boost port.
Holes got rid of wear marks in both engines.
And of course any RS125 Honda , RM/RGV125/250 with a T port would tear up the skirt without oil holes in no time.
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.
I do well to show it or not, I know that I do not enjoy much sympathy and surely with things like this I will have less.
https://worldwide.espacenet.com/pate...%3DJPS6065228A
https://worldwide.espacenet.com/pate...4-946c2ad18c33
Has opening the aux ports before the main been tried as a way of aligning the wave fronts given their different path lengths?
Opening the aux after the main would seem to "smear" the wave front even more, but maybe it puts it far enough behind the wave front that it doesn't disrupt things. With the extra path length and ~5° of stagger, back of the envelope looks like the aux could be as much as 1.5 bores behind.
Patrick Owens
www.OopsClunkThud.com
Yes Kawasaki built a 125MX with the Aux higher and their own power valve - was a dismal failure and was quickly replaced.
I did some consult work for a Belgian company building RS125 Honda cylinders , I got them to try reversing the timing angle on the T port.
That is the outer edges at 100% of bore were the highest.
In the end after lots of tests it proved to be no better , but lost quite a bit off the pipe.
The A kit setup was a dead straight timing edge @ 200* duration , that made easily the best power with the short A kit pipe/ignition/carbs etc.
PS - the staggered Aux dont have anything like the P Delta across the port into the duct , and work more as a bleed down of remnant Blowdown pressure rather than generating a high amplitude wave front, like the min does when opening by itself.
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.
I encountered the higher-than-main auxiliary exhaust ports of the Kawa KR1S when a friend rode one in a Dutch Standard class of 400cc four-cylinder foul-strokes against 250cc two-cylinder two-strokes (life ain't fair).
The rulebook allowed no more than 1 mm deviation from all standard port dimensions and all I did on the cylinders was raise the main exhaust ports 1 mm and fit 1 mm base gaskets that were later substituted by fitting Yamaha TD2 pistons with 1 mm less compression height. I used cylinder head inserts that restored the combustion volumes and fitted homemade pipes. We were not allowed to do anything about the 28mm carbs; all I did on the intake side was shorten the inlet rubbers about 5 mm. With 73 rear wheel-HP it was the fastest bike in its class, making fools of those 400cc foul-strokes.
The point I am trying to make: the little Kawa was a fine bike alright, but I doubt its original higher-than-main auxiliary exhaust ports were of any benefit for power.
My guess: Kawasaki may have tried to avoid power valves in the main exhaust ports because of patent infringement reasons, so they put valves in the auxiliary ducts, and then it would make sense to make those auxiliaries higher than the main port.
https://www.kiwibiker.co.nz/forums/s...post1130300124
https://www.kiwibiker.co.nz/forums/s...post1130300150
Golly frits that was 10 years ago when we had almost the same conversation.
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Kinky is using a feather. Perverted is using the whole chicken
Time flies, doesn't it? But when re-reading that old post of mine, I noticed an error.Ø54mm Yamaha TZ250G pistons in those Ø56mm Kawa KR1S cylinders wouldn't have worked very well. I used the older Ø56mm Yamaha TD2 pistons in the Kawa.
anymore info on the cc's and squish area of the head ? and stretching your memory/kindness : dimensions of the pipe ?
and with that power, what about the cracking cylinders arround the stud holes ? first the rear crack, and when you strengthen the back of the cylinders, the front crackone off the reasons most KR owners don't seek outright power but wider powerband and torque.
don't know if you've ever heard of the RGV-challenge ? http://www.rgv250.co.uk/forums/topic.../?_fromLogin=1
for those without a login :
I must admit to having a chuckle about all the tuning threads on this forum.
With so many people trying to tune the RGV isn't it time you lot came up with a half decent tune that was proven and available to all. There must be enough collective experience on this site to come up with a decent motor.
I have seen lots of bling bits for the RGV - heads, valves, pipes, ignition etc but I have yet to see a decent 250cc motor. Note the emphasis on 250cc.
VJ22 barrel is half decent, transfer port area is good, only weak point is the exhaust port which I think is too high (and people insist on making it higher) and doesn't have enough time area. Crankcases and flow through them needs work but this seems to be an area that is never touched (got the best part of 6hp on the KR from case work).
So I am going to set the forum a challenge
Build a VJ22 motor that out grunts on Krazy Katt's dyno my KR (got to think through how this will be decided)
Then because dyno runs are one thing and the track is another put the engine in either an Aprilia or an RGV chassis and beat my KR's single lap time and average race time (at least 8 laps) around Cadwell. You can choose your chassis and your rider. This test is the ultimate you need a good engine for a fast lap time and to keep it up for 8 laps it must be reliable.
Details of the engine spec (tune) must be made available on this forum so others can build a decent RGV engine.
I will put up as a prize ?500 as an incentive for you lot to do it - prize to the first entry to succeed
I will have a chat with James (Krazy Katt) and Jim (Arch) about the rules (they don't know this yet) and will post the final set up here.
If you manage to do it I reckon you should pay me - but first lets see if you can do it
challenge came from Marc Jordan, the guy that se the Bonneville record on the KR. no one succeeded , and if memory serves me right, not even one came close or had a go on the specified dyno.
It wouldn't surprise me if Husaberg is going to point out that I answered these questions ten years ago as well, but for now I will stretch my memory.
My Kawa KR1S combustion chamber shape was the same as that of the Aprilia RSA from 15 years later, with 50% squish area and 1% squish clearance, but with a lower compression ratio: 12:1 if I remember correctly. I can't help you with the exhaust pipe dimensions; my memory is not that stretchable.
I never cracked a cylinder stud ear, but I've seen it happen with Honda, Kawasaki and KTM cylinders. But I've never heard of KR owners seeking wider powerband and torque instead of outright power in order to avoid the cracking and I cannot imagine that it would make any difference at all. From what I've seen, using huge stacks of paper base gaskets seems to be the #1 cause for the cracking.
I remember reading that they could be quite variable in barrel height. Measure everything.
Don't you look at my accountant.
He's the only one I've got.
Shit yes, I should have remembered the KR1S as back in the day I had a production line going modifying them - I would have done at least 20.
This used an alloy base plate cut out by a CNC wood routing machine , as there were no laser or water jets here back then - as you are right Frits a bunch of paper would crack the ears off.
It was the fastest bike in proddy racing , but our tech rules were very lax back then and Honda generally was the way to to as the F2 kit parts went straight on and no one knew how to
discern ( or didnt care ) the changes.
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.
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