Mark:
To fill in your midrange hole - I found increasing the exhaust canister VOLUME to be most important. I fiddled with both megaphones and canisters.....read on......
(I KNOW....theory says the tapered megaphone reduces backwards "reflected" pressure pulses.)
The problem is the VOLUME is so small on the megaphones......and if you make the megaphone volume larger....the tapered cone grows so big on the end that people think you have your pets head in there. OK....it's a stretch.
Get a large exhaust canister - steel if possible so you can braze , weld , modify brackets and adaptors on it.
I modified a steel 1993 FZR600 canister so the smaller outlet pipe within the large tip diameter "floated" within the larger diameter. Most came stock with just the small pipe flowing and a steel wall between the smaller pipe and the larger canister tip. The floating (used an internal tri-pod) allowed exhaust gases rushing out the tip to create a vacuum on the smaller pipe.
I also added additional internal pipes between the canister chambers (there are 3 chambers typically) and connected all the chambers with these internal pipes. Cut both ends off to do it then re-attached the ends.
Lastly, I grew the larger tip diameter from 1 3/4 inches to about 2 1/4 inches. This gave me a substantial boost in HP (+7 peak)
Bike had a deep sound and fairly quiet around town. When I got on it I got a little of the "ripp" that racer pipes have but MUCH less noise.
For anyone who knows 1982 GS750EZ- they come stock with 112 mains. I was running 130 mains with this setup and the primary intake box inlet opened up to about 3.6 square inches - up from stock and CO was about 3 to 4% - spot on for reliable street bike. Whoo hoo.....
I am pleased to hear my BMEP or output per liter was good. My figures were dyno'ed by the way.
Another key is that IF you open up your primary airbox inlet this much - you WILL have to run a more agressive taper on needles. THAT needle change gave me +15 HP in the midrange and finally allowed me to have lean enough crack off idle mixture and aggressive midrange acceleration. Gas mileage was about 43 to 48 MPG. You learn alot in 4 years of errors. Your setup and results may vary.... and require different changes -Dieter
PS: Compliments to the "duaneage" on velocity stacks and contorted box shapes.etc..etc.....his whole post is exactly right.
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