The ica 100cc kart engines use diaphragm carbs with a choke size of 24mm. However by the carb exit they have diffused out to 27/28 mm. They bolt directly to the engine manifold and appear to diffuse out in area even more but hard to tell as the profile shape changes to match the reed block. This ibea carb is particularly good. http://www.out2win.com/catalog/images/ibeal5.jpg
The replacement world championship class is now called kf2 and these engines are 125cc with reed induction and powervalves. They use the same 24 mm carb design. the l6 carb shown here is homologated for this class. http://www.out2win.com/catalog/ibea.html
People are claiming 38hp plus for these engines. Clearly the carb is not holding them back too much!!!!
The 24mm carb rule is not the limit in horsepower development for a bucket that people think it is provided you use a diffuser. A 30mm at most area inlet port for a disc valve is all that is required with a nice tapered diffuser. Any bigger than 30mm will be a waste of time.
This is the homologation document for the ibea L6 carb as used for the kf2 kart class.
http:http://www.j3competition.com/downloa...mologation.pdf
You can see that it opens out from the 24mm choke to 28mm at the exit.
The whole carb was re-engineered to run unleaded petrol. The powerjet stops mid rev detonation which unleaded fuel is very bad at causing. The standard powerjet on a rs125 runs from around (I don't have my manual with me, will check when i get home) 8000rpm to whatever cut off you program it to do, there are 4 different cut offs which are selectable with different plugs into the loom. I think standard is 12600 and they go up in 200rpm steps from there. It also has a throttle position sensor that complicates things more in regards to on/off of powerjet. The way I understand it is that the way powerjet works is totally detrimental to achieving a good fuel mixture across the whole throttle range. You can perfect the fueling with the standard jetting configuration and because of the leaded fuel not have to worry about mid throttle opening/rev detonation.
The powerjet wasn't bought in till 1998, they changed the bikes to unleaded in 1997. You can still get leaded kits for the 125s and with them come a standard non-powerjet carb and 96 (or a kit) loom.
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Well this is a cockup......and won't be seen at Taupo, too wide, it sticks out wider than my feet.....
But it sure looked the business, probably the Worlds first ever Suzuki GP125 fitted with an RS125 38mm carb.
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you just need a nylon plug for the end of it and no nead for sliders that side![]()
"Instructions are just the manufacturers opinion on how to install it" Tim Taylor of "Tool Time"
Saying what we think gives us a wider conversational range than saying what we know. - Cullen Hightower
You are just plain wrong on this one SS.
On a typical kart track the karts are geared for 65mph at the top revs - 20,000 rpm. Now as at most the peak power is at 13,000 rpm, this equates to a speed of 42 mph. The engines are well into their power by 10,000 rpm ie 32 mph. As karts can corner so fast and have high exit speeds they exit just about all the corners in the power band and because the gearing is so low they absolutely rocket out of corners.
By the time the kart is 30yds down the straight the revs are already well beyond peak power speed. At high revs (beyond 15,000) these engines are producing very low bmep and are only making a reasonable amount of power due to the high revs.
It is equivalent to riding an rs125 honda race bike in only first gear whilst being geared for 42 mph at peak power and then just holding the throttle and letting the engine rev for ever.
PS I was a 100cc kart racer for many years.
100cc Kart engines typically have crankcase compressions in the 1.40:1 region.
The 100cc rules have always stipulated a fixed ignition.
Who says peak pressure comes sooner at 20,000 rpm?
It does not come sooner if your charging efficiency is well down compared to the peak power speed conditions. Also the cylinder is being poorly scavenged resulting in a high residual trapped exhaust gas content. This slows up the combustion rate.
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Number two motor is ready to start going back together.
Pic-1 shows the big inlet port and the small roll pins that will accurately locate the copper spacer plates and under barrel fins. The mouth of the inlet port is built up with DevCon to direct the incoming charge up and over the flywheels.
Pic-2 shows the shortened cylinder studs and alloy TZ head bolts that I hope will expand at the same rate as the barrel and thereby reduce cylinder distortion.
Pic-3 the shortened studs will make it easier when the motor is in the frame to remove the cylinder head without scratching the gasket surface, which happened with the old long studs that protruded from the top of the barrel.
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