That depends. Short and fat will fill the cylinder in a hurry. It also means the crankcase pressure will fall in a hurry. At revs that are too low for this setup, the transfer flow may come to a stop and then reverse before the transfer ports close.Originally Posted by Frits Overmars
Moreover, the positive exhaust return pulse that arrives too early at 2/3 of max.torque rpm, can do more harm because the lower inertia of short transfer columns offers less resistance to being shoved back into the crankcase.
Both these disadvantages can be balanced to some extent by lowering the transfer timing. But this is really a balancing act: lower the transfers too much and you loose the advantage of the short, fat transfer columns.
What you certainly don't need, is a combination of short, fat transfer ducts and a long transfer timing.
Between you and me: this may be the second reason (apart from upsetting the scavenging balance) that the Aprilia RSW and RSA cylinders respond so poorly to enlarging the entry of the B-transfers. Their inflow can certainly be improved, but that would reduce the column inertia and their timing is already 132°...
Thanks to all of you! I'll shurely be back for more advice when I get the cylinder...
Attachment 311486
Posted By Ken in another thread
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Kinky is using a feather. Perverted is using the whole chicken
that reminds me, i found a machine shop that will relocate the ring pegs for me. probly send the pistons out sometime this week. according to what wiseco told me the pin is just regular carbon steel with .002-.003" interference fit
wobb you got any advice about the roller bearing behind the sprocket. would a NJ style work fine or NUP be better ? im sure you know the difference but incase you dont, NUP has the seperate collar on one side, collar integrated into the bushing on the other side, so theres a collar on both sides . NJ just has the collar on one side as part of the bushing
The Aprilia RSW crankshaft bearings initially had bushings with integrated collars. These collars sometimes broke. After switching to separate collars the problem went away. I'm not saying that the same thing will happen with transmission bearings, but you never know until it happens.
Look at parts diagram of a 2013 KTM SXF250. They use rollers for crankshaft and output shaft bearing.
Many KTM's from the 85SX up have at least one Roller bearing on the crankshaft. The easiest way to see is look in the Pro X Catalogue.
Quite a few use the same bearing size as the Aprilias including quite a few karts.
On the original Honda 100/125 Four Strokes they had a Roller on the Ignition side they deleted it to save costs, when they went to the 185 and 200's they then had to run bigger bearings.
I guess it was still cheaper than rollers.
Here is the crankshaft of the week.
Any ideas to what it is from?
According to the author he had never seen one with worn bearings.
The rollers ran in steel sleeves in the cases.
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Kinky is using a feather. Perverted is using the whole chicken
Finally got my Maico on the Ashburton Dyno.
It is lean at 6k and just slightly rich at 9k. Where do I start to fix this, Exhaust, transfer ports, crank case volume? Does ignition timing change this at all.
Or is it just typical 2 stroke.
What we did find was that there was not much difference between 3/4 and full throttle. It is running 36 and so a 34 may be better, however, could the limitation be the reed block ? 36 does not seem overly large for a 250.
I would go bigger in the main jet to get the mixture right in the middle and then go bigger on the air jet to lean out the top, with a recheck of the middle afterwards. Rob is the guru with this stuff. Presuming tests done at full throttle only so the needle is non-effective.
100-90-80-70% throttle position runs.
Its been our experience too, not much difference over 75% throttle. And a bigger carb often did not add much.
Back to back comparison on my Suzuki GP125 of a 24mm OKO carb (Red line) vis a 30mm (Blue line) one.
Yes, that is what I would try, bending your fueling curve down by drilling out the air correction jet to get the 9K area right and plump up the mid range with a bigger main jet.
Anytime you drill out the air correction jet you will need to compensate with a bigger main. On our 125's the air correction Jet is about 1.2mm and the range seems to be anywhere between 1 to 2mm. Smaller engines seem to start about 0.8.
Looks like Jawa does Dave. not that it helps you now
Better late than never though.
http://www.jawashop.com/Crankshaft-and-Piston
http://www.jawashop.com/Detail/10999
16mm 19mm 20mm little end bearings
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Kinky is using a feather. Perverted is using the whole chicken
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