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So when are you planning on starting it up and going for a ride??![]()
What fuel pump did you use? Have any issues with power consumption?Well, of course there was plenty of work and learning but nothing extremely difficult. In my case the hardest part was to find most suitable mechanical parts like throttle bodies, fuel pump etc. Electronics side was easy for me since I was already familiar with these things.
Tuning is a subject of it's own. The beginning can be challenging. You have freshly installed system which you hardly know and the bike barely idles. But when you get used to tuning and learn how the system operates it's pretty easy and fast. At the first time I spend few weeks tuning on the road and then one hour on dyno to finish the tune.
3PSI is freekin incredible! With my current setup, I have to hold the bike on the 2-step for several seconds for it to start to build boost. It makes a shade over 2 PSI now. With my small F/B Rajay, I could make about 7PSI with the same settings, but I could not feed enough oil into it to keep it alive and at 18 PSI it was on the virge of overspeed. It also had other problems where I could drive thru the peak torque curve very easy. The setup I have now, I see no limits. I think you could shift at 14,000 and be safe with it! Crazy. I guess Terry ran the combo to 50PSI when they were setting all the records. They had to rebuild the turbo between runs to get it to live. LOL.
What fuel pump did you use? Have any issues with power consumption?
A friend of mine has old Funny Bike (actually I think it's Terry Kizer's ex-bike) with some big Rajay.
About that turbo company in Texas, was it somehow related to Aerocharger? They seem to make (or market) nice self-lubricated VNT/VGT turbos.
If you don't mind, get some pictures of your friends funny bike some time and post.
That's going way back and I am not sure of the companies name. I am 90% sure they were in Texas. The cavity to hold the fluid was cast into the center body and they had two small wicks that touched the shaft. They talked about the lub they used and it came from somewhere like the airforce. Seems like a nice setup for a race bike. I'll dig into it.
That picture above is the old Orient Express bike that Jack O'Malley owned & Terry Kizer rode. Ray.
Terry is not big on the web, but this is his responce.
"No this isn't the old Orient bike but a nice looking facimilty. The original bike is in a museum in Illinois. It spent some 12 years in the race rock cafes in Orlando and Vegas."