Jump to content

Are You Running Too Much Oil In Your 2T Mix?


copemech
 Share

Recommended Posts

Nice one Darrell......... :hyper:

Hey Cope you know trials bikes have disc brakes and tubeless tyres now! LOL...........

Na,my latest bike has drums,tubes and NO rear shocks ! Rigid - its the way forward. :banana2:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

 

Seems like we are all agreed on a range between 30-1 and 80-1?

Do what you want I say. If it goes bang add more oil, if it smokes like hell reduce oil!

I run an 07 rev on a747 as I used it on tt bikes and I've loads of it about.

Recently altered jetting on the bike to get it to run cleaner. Made a huge difference to the running. I use shell vpower and 70cc to 5 litres.

With the jetting changed it runs cleaner and silencer is less oiled up.

This topic will go on and on.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

007 I guess we will agree to disagree. :beer:

The oil helps to keep latent heat in the exhaust header which in turn helps with scavenging.

Hot rods etc wrap the header pipes in thermal bandages to help keep the heat in them this in turn helps the exhaust cycle scavenge more efficiently. In the end it is all academic as it will not help me keep my feet on the pegs :wall:

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

 
 
 

I run an 07 rev on a747 as I used it on tt bikes and I've loads of it about.

Recently altered jetting on the bike to get it to run cleaner. Made a huge difference to the running. I use shell vpower and 70cc to 5 litres.

With the jetting changed it runs cleaner and silencer is less oiled up.

This topic will go on and on.

Till you pull your header pipe and try to de grunge it! :blush:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

007 I guess we will agree to disagree. :beer:

The oil helps to keep latent heat in the exhaust header which in turn helps with scavenging.

Hot rods etc wrap the header pipes in thermal bandages to help keep the heat in them this in turn helps the exhaust cycle scavenge more efficiently. In the end it is all academic as it will not help me keep my feet on the pegs :wall:

Point being we have little heat in the first place putting about. Wrap one up and let us know just how you fair with that!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

Cleaning your header is general maintenance. Potato in the end and fill with caustic soda and leave overnight. Once back on the bike try and get it hot before your slow riding.

Has anyone ever tried pipe wrapping on a trials bike?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 
 

"pOT CALLING THE KETTLE BLACK, dARRELL"

Yep. Just a couple of old farts! :icon_salut:

Now three old farts, but not the one who can't figure how to shut off the Caps Lock............:)

Jon #3

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

Cleaning your header is general maintenance. Potato in the end and fill with caustic soda and leave overnight. Once back on the bike try and get it hot before your slow riding.

Has anyone ever tried pipe wrapping on a trials bike?

I have a friend who is a Mechanical Engineer and runs a thermo-wrap on the head pipe of his Trials bike. I imagine that other than the frying-lower-leg-skin avoidance feature, the effect is probably minimal

at low RPMs/fluctuating pressures in the pipe. Due to the operating conditions of a Trials engine, you also need to worry about rust and the mud stained appearance is usually not so good after a time.

On road race, narrow RPM, consistant load engines I think it works well, reducing radiant heat and keeping gas velocity high.

Jon

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

Now three old farts, but not the one who can't figure how to shut off the Caps Lock............ :)

Jon #3

Make that four old farts and one bucket of diarrhea........ Guess who is carrying the bucket? LOL :hyper:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

There is a very significant science to what goes on in the head pipe of a 2 stroke engine

The exhaust gas temperature at a certain RPM that the manufacturer designed the exhaust to make its best quality or quantity of power is very specific, the return pulse is timed to hit the exhaust port just as the piston is closing the port, there's a couple of reasons but mainly to keep the fuel mix from escaping into the exhaust

If we were to wrap the headpipe to increase the temperature in the exhaust what happens is the thinner gasses allow the return plus to move more rapidly, potentially it would return too early and the effect is spoiled

Only an engineer and a dyno and a lot of testing equipment would be able to test the benefits of header wrap and even then it would only work over a small RPM range, it sure ain't no "best kept tuning secret"

If it were a cheep way to make power, the factory's would be putting double wall pipes on the bikes rather than wasting their time on high tech ignition systems and time consuming porting work, I have only seen wrap used successfully on snowmobiles, but they are unique in that they get snow on the pipe and they really only at a narrow RPM range so it works on them, maybe a 2 stroke race bike could benefit as well

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 
 

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
 Share

×
  • Create New...