Can't help you there but your gudgeon pin looks dreadful. Hope that's an old scrap one.
Can't help you there but your gudgeon pin looks dreadful. Hope that's an old scrap one.
Don't you look at my accountant.
He's the only one I've got.
Dead correct , for a race engine 58% is proven technology.
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 did not bother to work it out. All I know for sure is that it vibrates really really bad at 9-10,000 rpm. When I looked into it I found the reciprocating weight side was notably heavier than the counter weight side.
P.S. Thanks for the link, read up on the 10,000 rpm 250 single and that they dynamically balanced the crank. I have seen car cranks done that way but how to make something home made to test a single crank looks challenging.
Lots of interesting reading here on bikes and adventure:- https://www.oldbikemag.com.au/
Hello Frits, it's been an honour to read your posts on the various forums during the years.
Regarding the balance factor, i'd like to ask you which is, in your opinion, the best route to follow when manufacturing a crankshaft from scratch: once I know the alternating mass, and designed the crank webs according to the engine case... how should I continue? simmetric holes on each big end side? a simulation?
my engine also has its oem balance shaft (pic below): if I, for example, use the 58% balance factor Wobbly suggested on the crankshaft, is there a way to properly adjust the balance shaft factor? (other than trying i guess, but just to have a starting point). Tbh I've also read Jan Thiel saying that you must just get rid of cagiva type balance shaft, but there's always time to throw it away after testing
thanks in advance.
Grazie Gradella.
A full description of how to manufacture a crankshaft would take more time than I have available. But I would strive for symmetry as much as possible.
You can also take a look at an Aprilia RSA125 crankshaft; not at the RSA250 crankshaft, because that is asymmetrically balanced.
For an engine with a balance shaft I would give the crankshaft a 50% balance factor en let the balance shaft take care of the other 50%.
The Cagiva balance shaft in your photo evokes memories. In Calusco d'Adda, where Jan Thiel and I lived for a while, we knew a Sport Production rider with a Cagiva Mito. According to the regulations you were not allowed to do anything to the engine but when I saw that balance shaft, I saw possibilities. It rotated at the bottom of the crankcase, submerged in gearbox oil, like a cream whipper. That must have cost power, so a cylindrical sleeve was fitted around it, smoothing its circumference. This brought 2 hp and no one ever thought of checking not only the cylinder but also the balance shaft.
it's not a bad thing till you throw a KLR into the mix.
those cheap ass bitches can do anything with ductape.
(PostalDave on ADVrider)
The best disc shape to help wear is to angle cut the closing side as per this Aprilia pic.
I tested every shape possible doing Hines 250 Rotax Superkart , and nothing made any more power than that - with the added bonus of less wear on the case.
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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