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Xceldyne Valves?
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Xceldyne Valves?
I been using Black Diamond Kibble Whites and heard of this company. What you guys using for big valves? Anyone use any of these valves fro mthis Comp-any? The reason I ask is I have heard from some guys that china makes lots of stuff now gets repackaged and sold as ,,,,,, ,,,,,, I don't like to support china but North America gets my money if I have anything to say bout it. Also some quality from china simply sucks period!! thanks MikeTags: None
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Originally posted by trippivot View Postrun whatever dohcbikes says to run1978 Gs1085 compliments of Popy Yosh, Bandit 1200 wheels and front end, VM33 Smoothbores, Yosh exhaust, braced frame, ported polished head :cool:
1983 Gs1100ESD, rebuild finished! Body paintwork happening winter 2017:D
I would rather trust my bike to a technician that reads the service manual than some backyardigan that THINKS HE KNOWS how to fix things.
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madmikeracing
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madmikeracing
MAD ? No not at all. I have a blast on these forums, I always enjoy a good laugh!!! Cheap entertainment also and sometimes I learn something, Its great, I do most all my own work, I eventually find out what works and what doesn't, So many products out there, some are poor quality and some are better. But I still remember starting out back in the eighties and how hard I worked for my eight second runs, Now going faster is my goal but the old gs s are kinda maxed out due to their age. I do like the star engines and heads but I wont spend that much on a GS , The V and Hines valves interested me . Going to try some custom titanium , Shall see how they work Out. I also like the DLC coatings and am a firm believer in them. Also the new NOS system looks quite nice and a 250 shot may make the old girl wake up. Shall see, Thanks Mike
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stick with stainless
I have titanium intakes on my fast bike but that is not what makes you fast. #1 titanium is expensive. #2 titanium is lighter and saves your valve springs on big lift cams - makes the cam lobe happier because less friction hurts less. special seats is a wise choice also. exotic yes but making a faster engine -no. longer lasting valve spring life -yes, less cam lobe wear -yes
fast is a term used incorrectly - I say that because my fast is not your fast - neither one of us are promod fast,, say like 3.8 in the 8th. why would I say that? because budget is a factor- and by you(madmike)saying you are not going to spend that much on a GS - defines where you are going to end up.
head / engine package as a matched pair is where your success is going to come from. a huge head on a little low comp engine puts the power too far up in the rev range and your crank will suffer -- a small head on a huge engine makes tons of torque -- well torque is nice but torque breaks parts faster than excessive rpms' - it is about matching parts to achieve the goal. general terms? street - street/race - race/street - full race show - full race drag - full race road course - full race hill climb - full race tractor pull - mini sprint oval - Gs engines are so versatile , that is the easy part -the hard part? weight and ..... the chassis! the frame has to help - you can build all the engine you can afford and get nowhere because of your chassis.
1327/1428 cc 13 or more to 1 -- 29/24mm 1150 casting with .348 drop ins or (G13/G7) - fed by 38 or 40mm mikunis' in a small tire bike that weighs 400# can dive into the 8's - put a little nitrous and a dyna2000 into the equation you'll be amazed what can get done on stock valve seats and a bunch of second hand parts - that will live for years. - how much you spend(and what you spend it on) is going to be a limiting factor.
or build a 1570 /16xx/17xx cap it with a vortexII and stuff 48mm lectrons on it to do the same times but live half as long and cost twice as much.
rule #1 on deciding how to design your head - how you going to feed it ? naturally aspirated , some nitrous, all nitrous, turbo? - (and the eternal constant) what are you willing to spend? look into skulled heads - really cool stuff there.
nitrous and titanium don't mix in my approach to building (thermal shock to the alloy) -- and remember to install softer seats in the head when using titanium. bux delux...$$$
when in doubt about keeping your money American and buying new parts - call APE - btw -the guys on the phone at ape ? don't ask them any thing technical. - save that for here.SUZUKI , There is no substitute
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madmikeracing
I looked for titanium beehive type springs for one of the engines years ago but gave up. I like the idea of the newer beehive spring design. Lots of things to fool with that's for sure. I really enjoy these forums , Later Mike
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madmikeracing
flat faced valves.JPG
These valves really interest me. They are titanium out of a gs ,Saw them on an ad for sale quite a long time ago, Titanium perhaps blanks and machined yourself? Are they available like that? Look like the way for some xtra compression, no dished faces which I disliked. Mike
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madmikeracing
Budget is doing all my own machining and other engine work! Amazes me what people charge for doing cranks...
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you are talking my language...
now you have my interest
A titanium valve is only 80 bucks a piece average price. a barillium seat is nearly the same. These exotic parts alone are just under 2 grand for intake side of your head alone. that is my kind of budget - unlimited.
and a bonus remark about price of crank work? I agree with you about the entertainment factor the internet provides!
I'd spend 2K on a crank/clutch before titanium valves - OH WAIT!- I did both - and then some.. more than once - lol !SUZUKI , There is no substitute
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So for 2K on a crank you end up disassemble, polish, new bearings(main and rods), rods checked over and balanced, rod small bush replaced, crank reassembled, indexed and welded. Beefed up clutch basket, backing plate and springs.
Is this what would happen? If so then 2K seems reasonable me thinks! Not in my budget but if your racing then that bottom end should prove to add good service life if all else is properly done and tuned. Of course knowing how to operate the engine also counts!1978 Gs1085 compliments of Popy Yosh, Bandit 1200 wheels and front end, VM33 Smoothbores, Yosh exhaust, braced frame, ported polished head :cool:
1983 Gs1100ESD, rebuild finished! Body paintwork happening winter 2017:D
I would rather trust my bike to a technician that reads the service manual than some backyardigan that THINKS HE KNOWS how to fix things.
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How to avoid Chinese valves; http://gszone.biz/valves.html
WE don't like to do titanium on steel seats.Speed Merchant
http://www.gszone.biz
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