By external area, you mean the external engine surface area (e.g. fin area) of the engine to convect heat away?
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
'79 GS1000S - 1085 Wiseco Kit - overheats at low speeds
Collapse
X
-
IanR
-
60ratrod
rejetting to be richer in theory should help to cool off due to the increased compression and the slight cooling effect of the additional fuel entering the cylinder. also, depending on how much you increase the compression ratio, you may need to run higher octane fuels. lower octane fuels to not burn efficiently enough and can cause pings, knocks, and detonations, things that can destroy all that you have done. also, there has been some research done showing that running higher octanes can help cool internal temps, since lower octane fuels burn faster, keeping the heat trapped in the head and cylinder longer and potentially causing the pings, knocks and detonations. it may be worth running a tank or two to find out.
i don't know how true this is to our small displacement engines compared to car small/big block v8 engines, but in say a small block chevy, the maximum compression ratio for regular 85, or your region's equivalant lowest octane rating is, is about 9.5:1 which is about 190psi +/- 10psi per cylinder. i know that the stock compression ratio is 8.5:1 or 150psi for both my suzuki gs650g and my kawasaki kz1000m1, allowing for lower octain fuels.
Comment
-
Originally posted by 60ratrod View Postrejetting to be richer in theory should help to cool off due to the increased compression and the slight cooling effect of the additional fuel entering the cylinder. also, depending on how much you increase the compression ratio, you may need to run higher octane fuels. lower octane fuels to not burn efficiently enough and can cause pings, knocks, and detonations, things that can destroy all that you have done. also, there has been some research done showing that running higher octanes can help cool internal temps, since lower octane fuels burn faster, keeping the heat trapped in the head and cylinder longer and potentially causing the pings, knocks and detonations. it may be worth running a tank or two to find out.
i don't know how true this is to our small displacement engines compared to car small/big block v8 engines, but in say a small block chevy, the maximum compression ratio for regular 85, or your region's equivalant lowest octane rating is, is about 9.5:1 which is about 190psi +/- 10psi per cylinder. i know that the stock compression ratio is 8.5:1 or 150psi for both my suzuki gs650g and my kawasaki kz1000m1, allowing for lower octain fuels.
Even properly jetted for a rich mixture, the BB 1100's still run hotter. Big Coolers and SERIES R/R's seem to help the most.
Comment
-
60ratrod
i was just suggesting it because running to low of an octane can really do some damage on higher compression ratio motors. personally in his shoes, i would try a tank or two of premium to see what that does to the operating temp since the kit bumps not just displacement, but compression.Last edited by Guest; 06-10-2015, 09:42 PM.
Comment
-
Originally posted by 60ratrod View Posti was just suggesting it because running to low of an octane can really do some damage on higher compression ratio motors. personally in his shoes, i would try a tank or two of premium to see what that does to the operating temp since the kit bumps not just displacement, but compression.
Comment
-
60ratrod
-
Originally posted by posplayr View PostWith my 1166 at CR=10.25:1 premium is a must. I dont know what the CR is for the 1085 kit but I'm guessing he needs to run premium else .....
My 78 has a 1085 and burns regular. That may be because my machinist spent an evening cc ing the head and chamfering the edges of the combustion chamber, which eliminates a hot spot and slightly lowers the CR1978 GS 1000 (since new)
1979 GS 1000 (The Fridge, superbike replica project)
1978 GS 1000 (parts)
1981 GS 850 (anyone want a project?)
1981 GPZ 550 (backroad screamer)
1970 450 Mk IIID (THUMP!)
2007 DRz 400S
1999 ATK 490ES
1994 DR 350SES
Comment
-
Originally posted by Big T View PostJim
My 78 has a 1085 and burns regular. That may be because my machinist spent an evening cc ing the head and chamfering the edges of the combustion chamber, which eliminates a hot spot and slightly lowers the CR
Wiseco say the K1085 is a 10.25:1 same as the 16V 1166 so I don't know other than mine will run on regular but will also ping. Talk to Bill about headwork on his 1166 that he blew up on the way back from Lost Coast on the rally to Mt Shasta. He was running regular and he barely made it back to Highway 101 before it finally gave up.
Could have been the gas, or could have been an overzealous machinist skimmed his head too much.
Comment
-
Forum LongTimerGSResource Superstar
Past Site Supporter
Super Site Supporter- Mar 2006
- 35604
- Torrance, CA
For people that think a R/R can affect oil temperature check this thread...http://www.thegsresources.com/_forum...ffect-oil-temp
I performed back to back testing (30 mile ride on a hot day) using both a series and shunting R/R and measured oil temperature along the way.
Result: the R/R had NO IMPACT on oil temp. Period.Ed
To measure is to know.
Mikuni O-ring Kits For Sale...https://www.thegsresources.com/_foru...ts#post1703182
Top Newbie Mistakes thread...http://www.thegsresources.com/_forum...d.php?t=171846
Carb rebuild tutorial...https://gsarchive.bwringer.com/mtsac...d_Tutorial.pdf
KZ750E Rebuild Thread...http://www.thegsresources.com/_forum...0-Resurrection
Comment
-
I added Fjbj40 to the list of people reporting reduction in operating oil temperature after installation of a SERIES R/R. This is somewhat of a first ! Most other people I know, having done so, have had such results with the Compufire SERIES R/R and generally on a 16V 1100E. In principle any SERIES R/R and bike close to thermal overload (Big Blocks especially) should see the benefit.
If your bike already runs cool (under 240 degF) then the series R/R will probably do little. If the bike runs at a steady rate (not talking about a short term dash) at an elevated temperature (270+ degF like the OP describes) the small differential of the SERIES R/R is enough to drop your operating temp. It is a pretty fine balance.
Originally posted by IanR View PostThe bike
1979 GS1000S, with Standard pipes (yes proper originals), and standard airbox and filter with lid on, Dynateck Electronic ignition (I've put a strobe light on the timing and it appears fine going fully advance at around 3500rpm).
The change
I've recently added a Wiseco 1085 piston kit. The bike runs like a train - lots of power, no flat spots, no hesitations up to redline, idles well.
The problem
If I ride for about 20-30 minutes at 60-80km/h 35-50mph on a COOL day with no stop-start traffic the oil temp gradually keeps rising (this model is the one with the oil temp guage) until it reaches almost 170C (around 330 deg F) before I stop and let it cool down. If I take it onto the freeway or non-urban roads and ride at around 100Km/h (60mph) or above the temp drops to around 100 deg C (212 deg F) or less.
HIGHLY RECOMMENDED FOR A Warm Running 16V GS1100/1150. For you naysayers out there. There is a significant temperature drop if you are running stock in the 250-270 degF range (My 1166 went down to 210-220 degF max).
Aprilla but shows back to back temperature drops
UPDATE; Wheat dog has confirmed a nominal 30 degF drop in operating temp for an 83 GS1100ED with 1166 kit after making this change over to the Compufire-Fire R/R
Installed Compufire RR - Way Cool!!
Chef1366 temperature drop results GS1100 with 1229.
Katman did an install
Compufire "series"
regulator / rectifier
Reduces engine oil temp.
Originally posted by Fjbj40 View PostI run a RR off a Goldwing, sh775, it also sits out in the air just above the swingarm on my 1085. It definitely helped with the temps, as you stated.
For the OP, you might just give it a try. 20degF drops are not unusual and they only get larger drops the worse the problem.Last edited by posplayr; 06-12-2015, 05:59 PM.
Comment
-
IanR
A quick update: I took my bike to a motorcyle workshop where they seem to know what they are doing with older bikes like ours - they build and race bikes of similar ages.
They put it on the dyno, stuck a small diameter copper tube well down the RH exhaust pipe and analysed the exhaust gases.
They showed me that the bike is running well, with a slightly rich mixture right across the range of throttle openings. They suggested that I should leave the jets were they are and install an oil cooler.
So that's what I'm going to do. I'll let you know how I go.
Comment
Comment