Page 650....
oh ok sorry.
The strange power delivery out of corners is caused partly by a slipping clutch. which is why the doctor pulleys are so good.
Also as frits said to weak a torsion spring and it holds it up in the gears. By putting the right spring in the back it down changes correctly and so its in the right gear all the time.
Also you need to keep it lubricated so it can change the gears correctly. The weak point in a cvt is if it gets sticky it will not change gear correctly. Anyone who has ridden a road scooter will know that when you ride along and then back off and then gas it again its slow to pickup like its in to high a gear. You can stop on the side of the road and then gas it again and it will downshift. There is ways to get around this lack of downshift and it makes them come alive.
A doctor pulley clutch will not release in the corners and will give you a positive lock this gets rid of the mushy cvt feeling.
Starting from the beginning I have been trying to find the posts that talk about pipes and collate and edit them. There is heaps of it and pages 620 630 and 640 have un edited collections of raw material.
Page 360
Page 364
Page 370
373
End of page 380
End of page 390
So far I have got to page 390 on this thread and accumulated 29 pages of posts relating to pipes.
Yea sadly, I have said this before as well.
NoMates engine was designed well over 6 years ago to make 32 crank Hp, first run on Brets Dynojet it made 27.6 RWHp - thus fucking perfection, at the time, as far as I was concerned.
Then it went on to run superbly for 3 years, winning 3 bucket titles in the process, with no issues whatsoever.
The rider, doing no maintenance at all due to work pressures, then proceeded for another 3 years to detune and fuck with it, causing all manner of reliability issues in the process.
Its now been redone properly, with Ignitech, chrome bore etc.
The dyno , a newer 168 with full load control,now says it has a huge increase in mid power due to the servo PV , and it makes exactly the same power it did before, on a simple rolling road,as per ESEs test unit.
Meaning ,in reality, its way ahead of the previous baseline.
So, as the old piece of shit that still holds the lap record at Mt Welly is now a quantum leap better than before,bring on the CVT ideas.
You will need alot better than that trick shit technology,to beat NoMates in a head to head.
Really fast engine, maniac do or die rider.
But what do I know.
Jack shit, obviously.
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.
OK technical question Mike has about 30 hp from around 100cc so that's about 300 HP/Litre
Rob has about 30 HP from around 125cc so that's about 240HP/Litre
Rob is of course constrained by the air cooling rule Mike is not.(although i think he is currently only liquid cooling the head)
Rob is constrained by the 24mm carb rule. Mike unconstrained by any carb size rule and has i assume a 36mm carb
Does that mean. Often a larger carb than is actually necessary is used for the race engines?
Or is the additional 25cc of Rob's engine is drawing more airflow threw the carb to make up the difference.
Or does the more constricted airflow through the Reed valve nullify most of the gains compared to the less restrictive rotary valve.
Therefor the reed engine needs a larger carb?
Putting aside Robs clever use of the venturi a 24mm carb only has an area equivalent to 1/2 that of a 34mm carb............
Although i guess Mikes revs higher and Robs engine is bigger which may account for the difference.....
hoping someone will be able to answer.........
PS that 24mm carb rule seems to have be about exactly right............
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Kinky is using a feather. Perverted is using the whole chicken
Is the carb open on the 100cc engines ??
Don't forget to look beyond two-wheelers. There's a world of CVT goodies for snowmobiles.
I almost forgot: Wob, with a CVT you can omit the power jet. And the quickshifter. And the trombone pipe. And a load of sprockets. And the power valve.
(And even the variable ignition if you can get the CVT to keep the revs from dropping when the throttle is closed).
Teasing apart, it is my considered opinion that shiftboxes would have disappeared decades ago if the FIM hadn't blocked their development.
In the Beginning... No, there were no two-strokes in paradise (which makes me wonder why they called it paradise).
OK, some time after the Beginning riders had to manually adjust mixture strength. They had to manually adjust ignition advance (and re-adjust their contact breaker points every saturday).
They also had to fiddle about with hand- and foot-levers to constantly adjust the transmission ratio between a more or less fixed crankshaft speed and a variable riding speed. This fiddling was called gear shifting and the need for it lasted until well into the 21th century...
I have several knowledgeable people make similar arguments Frits, but I have never seen this in action (snow mobiles seem to be the business that's for sure)
Is is practical and realistic to expect a CVT to be suitable for riders of all weights, I only see skinny buggers making use of the advantages, whereas geared bikes can quite often be competitive ( in the right hands) with a "portly" rider, it seems that from what I see, CVts are only suitable for ideal rider/bike combinations
A cvt engine does not care about the weight on it. the power to weight will be down much like a geared bike. The cvt engine will still happily spin at the rpm you set it to. The only way it would change is if the cvt was incorrectly set and then the engine could load down as it was going up through the gearbox to fast. A lighter rider will not show up a poorly set up cvt as much as the load on it wil be less but the bike will still be slower than a lighter rider on a correctly setup cvt.
If you set up a cvt incorrectly so its reving below or after its power peak then yes a geared bike will be faster. But then if you run a gear higher than you should on a geared bike you will be slower as well. It comes down to setting it up correctly
It may not be easy for you to swallow, but Wax is absolutely right.
If you see 'portly' riders beat skinny buggers, then there is something else playing a role as well. They have more power and/or better roadholding and/or they are simply better riders. All these things being equal, the heavy bloke doesn't stand a chance, gearbox or no gearbox.
the frames are not exactly cutting edge I m sorry , Aluminium frame have extruded sides then the are place ( I think ) one side at a time in a Jig before being welded to the head stock
MotoGp frames are hand made in a strict welding order to avoid distortion
tiss all I know
Stephen
"Look, Madame, where we live, look how we live ... look at the life we have...The Republic has forgotten us."
I know it doesn't answer your question, but when TeeZee tested his 24 against a 30 in a back to back test. The 30 didn't make anymore power than the 24 and so he thought that meant the 24 could do better yet as it must be something else holding the engine back.
Yeah i was surprised..... but then thought, well everything else on the engine was optimised for the 24mm carb anyway. I then assumed it was not really persevered with either. So how many runs and combination were actually tried?
I also guess it exceeded the max number of answerable questions.
But going back through some stuff it looks like some data Frits posted suggests the Rotary valve is worth about 4 HP over a similarly well developed crankcase reed with similar spec.(with a 125cc cylinder.)
So that could theoretically push an engine of TZ's spec down to 26ish HP (about 208 hp /litre) if it was a Reed instead Rotary valve (in outright HP anyway)
The same basic (possibly wrong) math would of course suggest that the 100cc reed valve engine might expect to gain about 3.2 hp to end up with 33.2 (or 332HP/litre)
if it was a rotary valve...........
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Kinky is using a feather. Perverted is using the whole chicken
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