And BTW, I don't have any bikes with plain bearing cranks. I've got a GS1000S and a GS750 with a 1085cc tuned engine. I love roller bearing cranks!! They're extremely tolerant of age and less-than-perfect maintenance, but my point is purely about strength, and I've tried to illustrate this.
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Roller crank vs. shell bearings..
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Anonymous
Originally posted by rphillips
And BTW, I don't have any bikes with plain bearing cranks. I've got a GS1000S and a GS750 with a 1085cc tuned engine. I love roller bearing cranks!! They're extremely tolerant of age and less-than-perfect maintenance, but my point is purely about strength, and I've tried to illustrate this.
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Hap Call
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redliner1973
Originally posted by brit7.11Sorry Tim, but that doesn't make sense.
Is price really an issue in a Formula One car, or a Moto GP bike? I hardly think so. And I already said that yes, one piece cranks are cheaper to produce, but that doesn't mean they are worse, does it? After all, who recently had a crank wear out in their plain bearing car?
And turbine engines are a completely different kettle of fish to reciprocating engines. The requirements for the bearings for a gas turbine are totally different. For instance, radial loadings are quite low, but axial loadings can be quite high. You can't compare a bearing in a turbine to a bearing in a piston engine. Faster isn't necessarily better!
There have been tests done on plain bearing crank bikes in this country. A Honda CBR600 with 160,000 miles on the clock was stripped and found to have negligible wear. Would a roller bearing crank have lasted longer? Very possibly, but who cares? The point is that given proper care, a plain bearing crank will last as long as the rest of the bike.
Don't get me wrong, I like roller bearing cranks, but I think that to say that plain bearing cranks won't take the load isn't true. There are plenty of highly tuned GSXR's (and all sorts of cars etc.) out there to prove different.
As for a plain crank not wearing much? most automotive engine i see have to have the cranks turned down at EVERY rebuild, whislt a roller usually can be inspected and reused without anything done to it. This is the reasons i am saying that a plain is used for cost-efficiency Vs a roller. Look at how many old GS's are running around today. Do you really think there will be alot of these new 15000RPM plus plain bearing superbikes running around 20 years from now WITHOUT having had an overhaul?? I still believe a roller outdoes a plain anytime...JMHO in good spirits!! :twisted:
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Anonymous
Originally posted by Hap CallMy question has more to do with nomenclature...what are Cobblers?
Hap
b.) Bollocks, or cohones to you.
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Hap Call
Originally posted by brit7.11Originally posted by Hap CallMy question has more to do with nomenclature...what are Cobblers?
Hap
b.) Bollocks, or cohones to you.
Hap
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Anonymous
Come on propflux man, you've quoted me but ignored just about everything I wrote!
and when your a sponser that craps out 500k+ per engine with plains, and close to $1Mil with rollers, do the math..hmmmm, one race...tore down...both can rev to 16k...$500k vs 1 mil.... one race...you get my point there
There's no way a roller bearing crank costs twice what a plain bearing does!!
As for the turbine engine, yes, radial loads are light, seems a PERFECT environment for a bearing which relies in a film of oil to maintain clearance.
There are other factors, as I implied, which dictate the choice of bearing in gas turbine engines. Roller bearings are NOT chosen in this application for their "strength". ( Note I mean ability to take load )
As for a plain crank not wearing much? most automotive engine i see have to have the cranks turned down at EVERY rebuild,
In this country, almost no car engines are rebuilt before the vehicle is scrapped. By far the vast majority of plain bearing cranks will outlast the rest of the vehicle given adequate maintenance. As I said (if you would just READ my posts) and I quote myself:"Would a roller bearing crank have lasted longer? Very possibly, but who cares? The point is that given proper care, a plain bearing crank will last as long as the rest of the bike. "
This is the reasons i am saying that a plain is used for cost-efficiency Vs a roller.
The very first thing I wrote in this thread was: "Main reasons would be manufacturing based, i.e. that plain bearing cranks are cheaper to make and are probably quieter and therefore more easily fit into recent noise regs"
Do you really think there will be alot of these new 15000RPM plus plain bearing superbikes running around 20 years from now WITHOUT having had an overhaul??
No of course I don't!!! I've already said as much. A roller will always last longer, all other things being equal. But the original question was about strength, not decades of durability! I have already mentioned Kent Stotz's championship winning 500bhp Honda Blackbird , and there are literally hundreds of blown Busa's in cars and bikes out there, some with nitrous, proving the strength issue. Very long term durability? Rollers every time.
One last point: I am rebuilding currently a GS1150 motor for a customer. I have just taken the (roller) crank to my crank specialist to be rebuilt. Why? Because the #1 big end had gone.
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cbxchris
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Don Lobacz
Brit, well said. The Kawasaki problem is the only one I can think of, and that may well be aggravated by the abuse that bikes get over here: bikes are often subjected to gas-diluted oil, 3-year-in-the-bike oil, and now extended-wheelie lack of oil. Plain bearings are much more than just adequate, otherwise the manufacturers would not put them in their technical marvels. At the extreme edge of use, rollers will do better. This thread started because someone wondered if it was simply an A vs B choice, and if B costs $100 more then we would gladly pay it. The problem is that for the manufacturers, that $100 has to be multiplied by hundreds of thousands of units which equals tens of millions of dollars. Demand for rollers has not yet overcome that kind of financial inertia.
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Anonymous
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Anonymous
Thanks for the tip Chris, but by the time I got them over here with shipping and import duty, they'd be twice that! Hopefully I only need one rod anyway.
Thanks for the kind words Don. Kawa's have alwyas been known to be weaker over here, with problems with cranks, valve seats, head wear etc. Honda's on the other hand have a rep for being bulletproof, with bikes like the CX500 and NTV650 (plain bearing cranks) racking up huge mileages in the hands of despatch riders. (do you have those?) I'm talking 200,000 miles plus in some cases, with no strip downs and only adequate maintenance.
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redliner1973
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Anonymous
Well, in engineering terms no. Strength in engineering terms, as far as I understand it, relates to a material or components ability to resist loads.
Therefore a "strong" crank will resist 400bhp, whereas the "weaker" one will break at 300bhp. However if both cranks are only subjected to 200bhp, the "weaker " one may well last twice as long and would therefore be more durable.
I know that in the US, the word durable is used a lot more than it is over here, and it has suffered from definition creep!
Britain and America. Two nations divided by a common language.
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Forum LongTimerCharter Member
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Earl
Originally posted by Hap CallMy question has more to do with nomenclature...what are Cobblers?
HapKomorebi-The light filtering through the trees.
I would rather sit on a pumpkin and have it all to myself than be crowded on a velvet cushion. H.D.T.
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Mark Harrop
revolution
Lots of good info...just like I've come to expect from this site. I feel G'd up on cranks now. (G'd up is hip hop slang my kids use, means informed)
But when I read this...
"Cobblers!"
I had to spit my drink back in the glass.
Thanks for the info guys. But why is there no selection of bearing shells for my GS or gixxer 750?
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redliner1973
Re: revolution
Originally posted by Mark Harrop.
Thanks for the info guys. But why is there no selection of bearing shells for my GS or gixxer 750?
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