Steve
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Degreeing my cams
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Anonymous
Does 106 go for all GS motors? My 400 hits the wall before red-line in 6th gear so I'd like to do this instead of changing drive sprockets. I should be able to get another 10km/h out of her which would be nice.
Steve
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Originally posted by srivettDoes 106 go for all GS motors? My 400 hits the wall before red-line in 6th gear so I'd like to do this instead of changing drive sprockets. I should be able to get another 10km/h out of her which would be nice.
Steve
If you are trying to increase the top end HP, you would want 108 degrees minimum and maybe 110. This will result in a narrower powerband and less low/mid-range power. On a small motor I would rather have the low/mid-range power the best it can be. Just my opinion.And on the seventh day,after resting from all that he had done,God went for a ride on his GS!
Upon seeing that it was good, he went out again on his ZX14! But just a little bit faster!
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Anonymous
Keith - while I believe your opinions on the effect of lobe centers on performance are valid, this topic started with Craig wanting to degree what I believe to be a set of Non-Factory cams, (though this has not yet been made completely clear). The manufacturers recommendations which I refer to are those of the cam manufacturer, not Suzuki. Somewhere on the face of this earth, somebody sat down and designed a non-stock cam with the profile he has selected. They ran it in an engine on a dyno and declared that "this is good, lets sell it". Before they came to this conclusion they spent many hours and dollars refining their camshaft to create good performance in a certain application. So my point is this: if this cam does not create the power band that Craig wants, he should probably look for different cams. Yes, minor shifts in the peak of the power band can be made by advancing or retarding the cam but, and I repeat myself, this cams ultimate total horsepower will be made in the "straight up" position designed by the manufacturer. The great value in degreeing the cams, as you have indicated, comes more from setting the cams accurately to the manufacturer's spec., than from shifting the power band up or down.
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Originally posted by gearheadmnThere is one point in this thread which seems to have been completely overlooked. That is; what is the manufacturers recommended installation center?
Jake1166cc 1/8 ET 6.09@111.88
1166cc on NOS, 1/8 ET 5.70@122.85
1395cc 1/8 ET 6.0051@114.39
1395cc on NOS, 1/8 ET 5.71@113.98 "With a broken wrist pin too"
01 Sporty 1/8 ET 7.70@92.28, 1/4 ET 12.03@111.82
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Anonymous
Jake - I like your thinking. Though much more labor intensive, your approach is the ultimate answer to questions such as this. Even a dyno sheet does not always give you a "perfect" answer as to how the bike will perform on the street or strip, (unless you already have a well established baseline of dyno and real world performance, which most of us don't).
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Craig
Originally posted by gearheadmnKeith - while I believe your opinions on the effect of lobe centers on performance are valid, this topic started with Craig wanting to degree what I believe to be a set of Non-Factory cams, (though this has not yet been made completely clear). The manufacturers recommendations which I refer to are those of the cam manufacturer, not Suzuki. Somewhere on the face of this earth, somebody sat down and designed a non-stock cam with the profile he has selected. They ran it in an engine on a dyno and declared that "this is good, lets sell it". Before they came to this conclusion they spent many hours and dollars refining their camshaft to create good performance in a certain application. So my point is this: if this cam does not create the power band that Craig wants, he should probably look for different cams. Yes, minor shifts in the peak of the power band can be made by advancing or retarding the cam but, and I repeat myself, this cams ultimate total horsepower will be made in the "straight up" position designed by the manufacturer. The great value in degreeing the cams, as you have indicated, comes more from setting the cams accurately to the manufacturer's spec., than from shifting the power band up or down.
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