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What determines redline in these motors?
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What determines redline in these motors?
Just curious, is it valve float, piston speed, timing chain stress, oiling, harmonics? I know any of these can wreck an engine, but what is the weak link in a GS twin?Tags: None
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No idea about the twins, but if you take a 650 up to redline and miss a shift, the valves and pistons get REAL "friendly".
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mine: 2000 Honda GoldWing GL1500SE and 1980 GS850G'K' "Junior"
hers: 1982 GS850GL - "Angel" and 1969 Suzuki T250 Scrambler
#1 son: 1986 Yamaha Venture Royale 1300 and 1982 GS650GL "Rat Bagger"
#2 son: 1980 GS1000G
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Want a copy of my valve adjust spreadsheet for your 2-valve per cylinder engine? Send me an e-mail request (not a PM)
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Originally posted by Ric View PostJust curious, is it valve float, piston speed, timing chain stress, oiling, harmonics? I know any of these can wreck an engine, but what is the weak link in a GS twin?
With good (aftermarket) springs, piston speed is the limiting factor IMO.
But I'm talking well above std redilne.
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Originally posted by Steve View PostNo idea about the twins, but if you take a 650 up to redline and miss a shift, the valves and pistons get REAL "friendly".Originally posted by tkent02 View PostDone it thousand of times, maybe millions. Hasn't hurt anything yet.
.sigpic
mine: 2000 Honda GoldWing GL1500SE and 1980 GS850G'K' "Junior"
hers: 1982 GS850GL - "Angel" and 1969 Suzuki T250 Scrambler
#1 son: 1986 Yamaha Venture Royale 1300 and 1982 GS650GL "Rat Bagger"
#2 son: 1980 GS1000G
Family Portrait
Siblings and Spouses
Mom's first ride
Want a copy of my valve adjust spreadsheet for your 2-valve per cylinder engine? Send me an e-mail request (not a PM)
(Click on my username in the upper-left corner for e-mail info.)
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Excepting rider error, as in missing a shift or revving the fool things with no load on the engine, 'redline' takes place after these things have quit making torque anyhow, so you get more acceleration by just shifting before the tach-suggested redline.and God said, "Let there be air compressors!"
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2009 Suzuki DL650 V-Strom, 2004 HondaPotamus sigpic Git'cha O-ring Kits Here!
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Ric
Robert, you make a most excellent point!
I admit that I ride my wife's bike like it's a diesel, mainly because I'm leery of locking it down( could have to do with driving a dump truck for a living, too) on the way home. Also need to love on the carbs a little to richen the upper mid to full throttle after looking at a few plug chops, but that can wait till pods are ordered.
I tell ya for a 300, this is a torquey little thang at half throttle!
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No, wind it out. They like it.
I have been winding them well past the redline since these bikes were new, seen no damage whatsoever from it.
Probably the most abused was my first 550. Beat the heck out of it daily, all of my friends had 750s or bigger, I made this 550 keep up for years and years. When we tore it down to fix leaks at 120,000 miles it had no wear on anything, rings, pistons, everything else were no where near service limits. We replaced no parts except seals and gaskets and it ran for a few more decades at least.
I think maybe the 1000s and 1100s might be less tolerant of the high revs, but I haven't seen any damage on them either. ON those it's no so necessary to wind them up so tight, they actually have some useful low RPM power unlike the little bikes. You can actually pass a car or merge onto a highway safely without going so deep into the revs.Last edited by tkent02; 09-27-2015, 09:35 AM.
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Originally posted by robertbarr View PostExcepting rider error, as in missing a shift or revving the fool things with no load on the engine, 'redline' takes place after these things have quit making torque anyhow, so you get more acceleration by just shifting before the tach-suggested redline.
Riding a 300 you need to know how to make it go, especially if there are other vehicles around. If it keeps pulling harder and harder you aren't there yet.
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Yep; even though I've been riding bikes most of my adult life, my mechanical sympathy kept me from routinely going above 6k on most engines, reasoning that if it was limited to that by my right wrist, the engine would last longer. Then I realised that with the very short stroke small capacity Japanese engines, the piston speed, the mechanical loadings, the material stress was actually lower at high RPM than some of the old long-stroked crapheaps I'd been brought up with, and had revved to 6K quite often, with nothing breaking.
Game on, from that point
I still believe the overall longevity is influenced by treatment, but with modern oils there's a huge extra range of acceptable stresses the parts can take and shrug off. Also, bear in mind, the GS range was built to last by a company determined to make a name for reliability.---- Dave
Only a dog knows why a motorcyclist sticks his head out of a car window
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Ric
They have certainly established themselves as reliable, Grimly.
Tkent, when I do wind it out it pulls hardest to within the neighborhood of 6000 rpm or so, at a little less than WOT. At WOT it's a tad less brutal and violent, and it just kinda marks time past 6500ish. Plug chops confirm it's running lean at WOT. I know running lean kills engines - that's actually what makes N2O so destructive, not the N2O itself. So till I get her podded and jetted, I shouldn't get too excited with the throttle, right?
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Before you go searching for the missing horsepower with pods and jets, I'd look at the possibility that the 300L motor may have cams that favour the lower end of the rev range. The 250 cams were pretty revvy, but there's no guarantee that they didn't sabotage the high end rush to make the bike have a more beginner friendly power band like a DR200. Suzuki had some really anemic cams on the shelf for the restricted power bikes for the Euro market.
If they are 'lawnmower' cams, you could easily swap in some 250E ones, I'd suspect. Also look into the compression ratio and valve sizes before you start swapping things around. There's also the possibility that they sabotaged the air box to neuter it. IOW you have to look at the whole 'food chain' before you start spending time and money.'82 GS450T
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Originally posted by Ric View PostThey have certainly established themselves as reliable, Grimly.
Tkent, when I do wind it out it pulls hardest to within the neighborhood of 6000 rpm or so, at a little less than WOT. At WOT it's a tad less brutal and violent, and it just kinda marks time past 6500ish.
What has been altered?
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Ric
Tkent, I put a pair of Dime City's 17" shorty mufflers on it. Other'n that, everything is stock, no fuel restrictions, I cleaned the carbs myself, stock jets. Only oddity worth noting is it never had any pilot jet plugs. I didn't even know it was supposed to have them till I read BikeCliff's carb tutorial link.
Conventional wisdom tells me the shorties are what leaned it out, and it's not by an awful lot - rideable, just not right. It certainly hasn't lost any power, in fact it pulls a lot better in the range I already mentioned compared to the stock exhaust. Could that have to do with the missing pilot plugs?
John Park, you just got me thinking of a frankenbuild of sorts - a 250 top end on the 300. The 250 had 10:1 CR compared to the 300's 8.9:1 CR. Hmmm....
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