Hi all,
I have been sifting over this thread over the years and love the knowledge and informtion shared on here.
I have a question for anyone with experience on the subject.
I am mixing Avgas and Maxima 927 Castor, Have run it in the bike once and it was fine but was quite hard to get mixed up and while I was doing a main jet change the fuel I drained out had a milky look to it after it sat for a while, so I assume it's seperating. Is there anything I can add to it to get it to be stable or should I just be using something else? I wanted to use castor for max protection.
Grateful for any advice.
Cheers
Neil
No funnyer than " seex a cleek " Ozzy accent.
But then I would rather have " fush and chups " than "feesh and cheeps" - just a personal choice mind you.
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.
Happy thinking:
http://trademark.markify.com/tradema...yger/014093306
"Success is the ability to go from one failure to another with no loss of enthusiasm.”
http://worldwide.espacenet.com/publi...C&locale=en_EP
seems kinda legit on a first view![]()
Let me start by explaining once more why the ring peg should be at the 6 0'clock position at all.
Each time the piston ring passes over the exhaust port, it bulges outward slightly, after which it is shoved back into its groove.
If the part of the ring to the left of the exhaust port does not have the same length as the part to the right of the port, this shoving will invoke an inclination of the ring to rotate in its groove; one end of the ring will constantly hammer against the ring peg. This may cause a burr on the ring end and/or it may work the peg loose.
The only way to prevent this is to put the peg diametrically opposite the exhaust port.
The C-port can be as wide as 40% of the bore, provided the peg is at the 6 o'clock position, so there is not more than 20% overhang of unsupported ring.
If the peg is off-center, even if the C-port width is not more than 40% of the bore, the ring overhang may become >20% on one side and we should be careful.
The ring will be thankful if you remove the sharp top and bottom edges on all ports. At the exhaust ports you can also apply a radius. But a radius at the transfer port edges has the negative effect that it will facilitate the inflow from spent combustion gases into the transfer ducts, so here we should restrict ourselves to a really small bevel.How helpful is it to mod the cylinder just above the top middle of the C port to give the ring ends slightly more time to settle when the piston is travelling upwards? I have never run the end of the rings in the middle of a port before on any size engine and a 250cc cylinder would seem more likely to be a problem than on say a 50 cc cylinder.
Large diameter rings are more prone to problems because their radial depth is usually smaller in relation to their diameter, compared to small diameter rings.
Now we know why the Interweb is not only a great resource its also bloody dangerous.
Its now simple to solve the Ryger technology issue and get all the info we need - send some large unfriendly people to this address.
Put pen and paper in the mans hand and threaten to remove his fingernails unless he cooperates.
Address:
Hengelosestraat 141
Post code: 7521 AA
Town: Enschede
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.
There are currently 13 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 13 guests)
Bookmarks