Tanks Dave, wob and frits,
The frigerio was the choice of my friend and driver. He fellt in love with the bike![]()
But i was aware this will be hard to tune. As backup, if we fail, we have strongest reed bike in the competition, a TGM.
In reglementation we can change engine, but have to keep year and aircooled
Tracks vary from race to race. From more cross to more hillclimbing or trail sections.
But we could change bike from race to race and the puchs seathight is bit lower, better for some races
Rotax advertised 28 hp and to tell you an range that we dream for... lets say real 32 hp
Found many things we can do better
Head has no squish area!!!
Exwindow has widest area after blowdown... never seen!! Oh ... about bit over 40mm!!! Transfers aimings ar nearly horizontal
Bosch HKZ with heavy rotor...not programmable
Rod, piston and pin are heavy
Exducts ending 39mm
Pipe to shallow
Roundslide carb
Frits!! You better tell us engines that are NOT touched by you!!!! ???
Please tell us more secret specs from your rotax 124and if you would...the storys behind it
Tanks a lot !!
Grüße Wolfgang
Hi Wolfgang,
if you mount the carb on the side, just make a cage of some steel pipes to protect it. Inside the cage might be room for an airbox with the carb inside it.
This cage can also protect the driver's leg when hitting a tree.
Grüsse Frank
Rotax horror pics
Folks!
If you are to weak for...immediatly close your eyes!!!
This ist stock GS ( in german GELÄNDE SPORT) offroad sports zylinder with iron cast sleeve
Try to get a rare alu nikasil aircooled next![]()
Talk to Fletner, he has extensive knowledge on how to change an old rotary valve aircooled engine (kawasaki big horn 350) by dumping the carburator and mounting fuel injection. The long intake duct can still be used for air intake, but the injection can be mounted very close to the rotary valve.
Peter ...thanks
My knowledge is to small for injection...as the pocktets of us
Made first measure of space between crank and crankcase...distance is small...so my guess is that we have relatively small free volume
Maybe its one additional way to gain some power to enlarge case free volume? Frits...? Good idea?
Rotary Valve engines can use bigger case volumes - under 1.3 , the Aprilia was 1.24 and was helped by using a long rod.
This may be easy to do in your engine and fit a plate under the cylinder.
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.
If memory serves, I once posted the specs in a forum, probably in Pit-Lane, but I'm not sure.
Later.....
I've been searching through Pit-Lane for half an hour now, without finding what I was looking for, so I will leave the searching to you.
One thing I do remember: Rotax used an inlet disc with an ultra-late closing timing because of the ultra-long inlet tract in the original Rotax 250 engine, on which the Rotax 124 was based. I encountered that same disc timing in the '124' and about the first thing I did, was to mount the disc one tooth (16°) earlier without altering the disc itself.
Then I shortened the disc cover stub and I enlarged the hole in the clutch cover, so I could fit a Mikuni inlet rubber between the disc cover and the inside of the clutch cover, and I enlarged the inlet tract diameter from 34 mm Ø to 38 mm Ø.
How and why I modified the cylinder, is posted 'somewhere' in the internet. If you manage to find it, please let me know where.
Hope i could do you a favour frits...but you did bigger for me within spend your time for me!
Wow...frits is wasting time only for me!! ?...for us!? Applause from me in the name of all gasheads here...
Frits OvermarsJeu 13 Juin 2013 - 17:12
par Frits Overmars
By '2 mm clearance' I assume you mean 1 mm either side between crank and case, and 1 mm between outer crank radius and inner case radius. Viscous drag increases strongly below 1 mm clearance; enlarging the clearance beyond 1 mm has only a limited effect on viscous drag. So if increasing the clearances beyond 1 mm improves power, I would assume that this improvement was caused by the increased crankcase volume. It could also have been caused by improved inlet flow, but I cannot comment on that without knowing your engine so I will leave this aside for now.
The most striking example of crankshaft clearance I saw in the old Rotax-124 kart engine that I worked on from 1978 onward. It was really a 250 cc motocross engine with a 125 cc crank in it. If I remember correctly the case diameter was about 12 mm larger than the crank diameter! But it was easily the fastest engine of that era, and the most susceptible to tuning modifications. It was also the grandfather of the Aprilia RSW125 Grand Prix engine
And
http://www.pit-lane.biz/t4072p250-gp...ighlight=frits
Pleasure for me if you were searching this
Your writing 2013 went round and round in my head...
12 mm space...wow...have further questions as we have much less space/volume free
Merci danke thanks ✋
Wolfgang
The night is young here in europe frits! Isnt it
So I have a question to you
Is increasing small free volume of crankcase with this uggly long intake duct..effctiv too?
Did you tested this ? Or only with carb direct on rotary case?
Rotax long intake duct Function is clear to me...only giving carb protected Position, that we need in enduro use...
And..we should not worry about things that are not available in the moment...new circumstance...and we have to find new fitting answers? Your great findings will never fit perfekt for my expectations...for example enduro engine!?... so how could Iexpect clear numbers frits?
Make us understand physiks of 2 stroke...as you did/ tryed......if impossible...still continue tryings ...please
Tank you frits so so much!
Grüße Wolfgang
For last 3 days.... late later closing disc timing was my conclusion for Stock long duct
Cause of long duct with big slow moving mass inside?
To use a kind of charching effect of its energy in action!?
Do you agree?
Danke!
Wolfgang
Wos,
We ran the CanAm motorcycles (Enduro and Motocross) back in the 70's that had that engine. In that time it was a great engine! It had a wide powerband, good transmission ratios and was reliable. We liked the 175 as it would keep up with the 250's on the long dirt roads between trail sections, the weak points were the CDI which was very expensive to replace and the rotary side crank seal leaking causing bad smoking..We ran them basically stock except for some pipe work and lots of frame modifications to increase suspension travel.
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