
Originally Posted by
wobbly
The only difference the gearing makes to the power curve as seen off an inertia dyno is the run time.
In 1st gear it would spin from 6000 to 14,000 in an instant.
Not long enough to get the correct heat level into the pipe.
I usually run it in 4th gear as this acceleration rate is all but identical to what happens in the data readout on track.
After doing 3 full throttle pulls, the pipe surface is up to temp, I then do 2 recording runs back to back and overlay them.
They are usually then identical within 2/10 of a Hp so I choose one and delete the other.
There have been arguments for years over crank inertia in a racing 2T, with the basic theory being that with more inertia the in cycle speed variation is reduced.
At TDC where alot of work is done compressing the combustion charge, the crank slows down - to where it then accelerates very quickly toward BDC and speeds up as the
piston runs over the transfers.
This theory has been rubbished by some clever minds, BUT, bottom line is that it was discovered instantly when HRC offered total loss setups derived from A kit parts
that simply removing the flywheel lost ALL the overev power.
Ive done it, when I first started using Ignitechs on the old MX based RS125 Honda - ditch the flywheel and it simply WILL NOT rev out.
So the factory and VHM came up with so called " high inertia " cranks to be used with total loss where no flywheel was used.
This also then enabled lighter ones to be used for short tracks, favouring acceleration, or even heavyer ones for big tracks where overev power is king.
Jan has stated that he could find no advantage to so called heavy cranks on the Aprilia, but that I am sure is an artefact of the design being very " heavy " to start with
and making it higher inertia again simply ran into the law of diminishing returns.A very heavy crank is simply too slow to accelerate, and nothing worthwhile is gained in the top end against that loss.
A stock RS125/250 Honda has a VERY light crank compared to the Aprilia that is full of lumps of heavy metal.
I have recently built cranks for a couple of customers with very expensive Rotax derived tandem twins, using full circle wheels with no steps and full of heavy metal balancing like the Aprilia
and all report amazing gains in overev ability,cylinders and pipes etc being identical.
I don't see any contradiction in any of that. I helps me to visualise crank mass, (and every other rotating mass in the system) as a big bungy cord between my throttle and the back wheel, it only costs me overall acceleration potential if I let the bungy cord go before it's recoiled. If the type of racing in question doesn't lend itself to holding on to that bungy cord beyond peak power revs then low mass is the go. Like F1, not only zero flywheel but super light billet HT steel alloy cranks.
Go soothingly on the grease mud, as there lurks the skid demon
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