I would have thought it was pretty obvious if you work in the industry see attached
That will be the problem. Maybe it also didn't have a Turbo like those pre 1956 2 strokes
I would have thought it was pretty obvious if you work in the industry see attached
That will be the problem. Maybe it also didn't have a Turbo like those pre 1956 2 strokes
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Kinky is using a feather. Perverted is using the whole chicken
TeeZee has already talked about sleeves, use Thread Tools and View Images to see them.
Anyone who thinks they can win races against the current crop of 20-23 hp FXRs with a low 20's hp 2-stroke is likely to be dissapointed.
Why? Has anyone actually tried?
41 hp 125 strokers used to whip 75hp 4 strokes all day long in formula 3, and there are plenty of 125 GP chassis that have found their way into buckets (daves fiddy is a perfect example), and in the grand scheme of things, that has bugger all power. It has won plenty against bigger more powerful engines. Darren Gosper had a fast one back in the day too (but if I remember right, a standard RG chassis)
Some are forgetting NoMates RGV100/RS125 that had over 28 Hp some 7 years ago.
It won 3 straight bucket titles and was basically unbeatable - THEN became unreliable due to uncorrected wear on the bridge.
Anyone who was in the way got blasted on any short straight, or got ridden over the top of.
Fast 2T, fast chassis, maniac rider - no one got close unless he crashed.
The cylinder liner has been plated now, and it runs all day just fine - the rider is busy doing other stuff so it hasnt been out for some time.
SpeedPros new setup is for a few customers, not his own use - and I am doing the pipe layout to suit 192* and 12,000,so will be interesting to see how a low
20s 2T goes with good handling and riders.
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.
Terry Fitzgerald had mid 70s (GsxR400) Andy Bolwell, Bredan Gere and John Lowther (all ZXR400's) had something similar, Chis Huddlestone had 68 (ZXR 400) and Adrian Main had 71hp (GSxR400)
But yea, as I am sure you are aware, Steve Ward had the measure of them all (most of the time), as did Glenn Hayward (even on his NX4 framed fiddler special) Jason Easton, Cam Horgan and quite a few others.
That was after Methanol was banned (boo), and before the 450 rule came in, where 80hp was the number for a big bore 400.
This is getting exhausting. At first you mention a lack of primary gear ratios, then you tell me you knew all that. Same with the gear ratios. Now you complain about having only 4 gears. Next thing will be the 10 inch scooter wheels and tires? I don't get it - and I don't have to.
Fact is:
nowadays, everyone is able to go way faster on a Vespa than reasonable without running into problems concerning the number of gears, the availability of primary gear ratios, the spread between each of the 4 gears or the durability of the gearbox.
Im not forgetting it, far from it.
I recon, with the right pipe, frame and rider, based on what I am told, and see written here in regards to what bikes are winning, a mid 20's stroker in an RS chassis would walk away with it (and perhaps squash silly rumors that tuned 2 strokes are unreliable)![]()
Calm down schatzi!
I build small frames for a living.
Have you had the opportunity of tuning a 2 stroke with more than 4 available ratios? No matter how you shuffle the cards, that, and than alone, is what holds you back.
Even at Stokach, where blech roller quarter miles reach frightening speeds, or the once a year 2 laps of the Nurburgring, where the limit is pushed further still, if these engines had more available gear ratios, then we would be able to build engines with more power (just over a narrower RPm range)
I would be interested in seeing the maths that support your assertion that a change in the primary drive ratio alters the power output on the dyno.
Attachment 263363
A graph you posted of a multi gear run.
Three different overall gear ratios and pretty much the same power output from each.
Changing the primary gear ratio affects the overall gear ratio just like changing gears does. But as we can see from the graph there is no real change in rear wheel hp.
Maybe you missed it when I first asked you, but I was hoping someone who knows so much could explain their claim in terms that make sense.
Yea, that's so true, is it because they are easy to ride fast compared to a peaky 2 stroke?
I had well and truly expected a two stroke to have been winning again by now, but as Wobbly pointed out, some people just aren't playing just now, and it's just about "the best of the current bunch"
Hi Haufen, welcome to the net where some posters substitute endless talk and bragardo for real substance and become snide if you chalange them, get that every where I expect, like pubs, and clubs where there is always a big noting talker.
TeeZees 30hp engine makes 20+hp at 10500rpm.
TeeZee diarys his work whatever the result, good and bad, if anyone doesn't wan't to build a 30hp Bucket then don't would be his opinion.
Some of the FXR's lining up on the grid make a bit more than 20hp.
And anyone wanting to set the world on fire with a 20-22hp 2-Stroke are more than welcome to post their progress and results here.
How relaible are the 4 strokes that do all the winning, I mean how many hours before a front running engine needs valves? (a fast ZXR400 needed valves and shells every season, and they are not cheap I can assure you.)
A low revving (in context) 2 stroke should be able able to do a season on nothing more than a couple pistons and a few more rings I recon, they do in the European geared scooter racing anyway, it's only the high revving 30 plus horsepower engines that need cranks halfway through...
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