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The big secret is dyno calibration.
Anything is possible if you toss enough money at it, but I wouldn't expect it tp last too long.
I'll say this. If the dyno isn't bogus, it did a pretty impressive top gear roll on..
Here is the dyne chart on my T-3. 1,000cc kitV-7 Sport cam36mm round slides Heads ported and polishedS&W valve springsK&N filtersAlthough not a high performance engine it pulls well. Don't know where you would find an additional 70+ HP.GliderJohn
The 1000 cc push rod gas naked frame record at Bonneville is held by a Guzzi, team Subtle Crowbar I believe...The record is 151 mph...From my experience with land speed racing ,150 MPH a naked frame bike requires at least 100 rear wheel hp maybe a bit more with the Guzzi frontal area...I believe it's a two valve??, of course it's a racing bike and likely has a load of money into engine development..
I still think a quality racing company with time and development could engineer a fix to all the problems that happen when you juice it up.
Problem is like the estimable Mr. Roper points out that some of the best racing engineering minds have been twiddling the Guzzi lump since the late 60s, and the limits are very well known with fully � built � bleeding � edge two valve motors never reaching more than 100-110 (relative) Dynojet WHP. 2V Guzzi engines have too many severe design limitations to reach ultra high outputs; reaching 100 WHP per liter is a stellar result for any ca. 1,000 cc, two valve, pushrod, air cooled engine in any case. Kristianwith
With 10 RWHP per 100cc a 1300cc motor should be able to produce 130 RWHP. With modern slipper piston technology your reciprocating weight should be the same or less. NASCAR spins their push rod engines to 9000 RPM with heavier valves than we would run in a Guzzi. So 130 HP seems plausible.
Yeah , but Nascar motors and XR 750's need a new crankshaft after a couple of races Those engines run ridiculous cam profiles , and compression ratios of 14:1 requiring 110 Oct fuel . One Cup car engine costs about $70K to build , and lasts maybe 1,000 miles , and the last time I checked , an XR crank was $15K . Not practical for a production street engine . Dusty
Yes it's expensive and short lived when you're at the edge ..Nascar and some drag engines have over 500 PSI valve spring pressure and open the valves to .850 inch. Can you run your Guzzi at 9000 rpm for several hours without shortening the engine life? ..What is impressive is the NASCAR specific fuel consumption of about .35 pounds per HP per hour, that rivals Diesel engines of a lot less power.. My Triumph land speed racers make 62 flywheel hp/650 cc's and crankshaft life is maybe 2 hours at maximum power...
Rough Edge, We got that same 973 cc Lemans 1000 up to 159mph on gas in 2011. I`ve never seen anything close to 100 hp at the rear wheel on the Super Flo dyno we used. Skeptical as well, just no way to get that kind of airflow/hp without forced induction , Nitrous , or ridiculous rpm. Bill Ross
An Evo Sportster at 1350ccwith the right parts can make a reliable 120-130 rear wheel HP for a cost of about 6 grand ... It's a breathing limitation primarily.. not the weight of moving parts...Nascar makes about 850HP from 5700 cc's...Without any rules the engines might crowd 950 hp for short periods..Take away 12 % for RWHP....Harley XR750 race engine can get 90-95 flywheel hp...And these are not 10 percent optimistic Dynojet power readings.. Nascar and Harley have had constant development and tuning from the best in the business with high budgets... New DOHC 1000 cc sport bikes make 160-200 hp with full emissions equipment and stock mufflers.....
The words Evo, 130hp and reliable don't belong in the same sentence. Air cooled twins don't exceed 1hp(rear wheel) per cubic inch as a rule. The flame speed of gas is a constant. To get more power you need to either change the velocity(hemi heads, forced induction, etc) to increase the flame front or add more air. Twins just run out of room and don't have enough valve area to remain remotely reliable at 1hp per 10cc's. They obviously can in race applications and you're extremely knowledgeable in that area but on the street and over the long haul a 1350cc Harley putting out 130hp is a time bomb . It will go BANG at any moment.
I suggest you go the XL Forum and have a look.....Look at the speed records look at the engine builds and talk to the guys...later model Sportsters with the improved crankshafts are capable of 120 plus HP and are not a time bomb...Obviously any mass produced engine that is modified will have a shorter engine life...Not really a bang at any moment when properly built... I am less knowledgeable than people give me credit for......I'm not a talented engine builder...I simply find the opponents weakness and go for the kill...The weakness was their engines were fussy and too sensitive to various factors when at the track..I built a reliable reasonably powerful engine that was more tolerant of changes in air density...Tuned on the dyno...and with no more that one jetting change comes off the trailer ,sets a new class record and we go party.....I have to give credit to my good friend who rides the bike... At 130 plus MPH, on a vibrating naked frame Triumph ,he is posting on bare steel foot pegs to get his ass slightly higher than his helmet for best airflow and speed...
Hey Chuck, Standing invite to bench race, ride , knock back IPA`S still stands when you are back in So Cal ! Rough Edge, The Super Flo numbers were low , mid 70s to mid 80`s depending on what the set up was. I chased ignition timing, cams and cam timing, AFR`S and octane to find what the engine liked , and didn't. Remember thinking at the time we might not be competitive , the big white dyno proved otherwise. The numbers aren`t so important as the tuning tool the dyno provides , especially where the peak numbers are at with RPM. In watching the video again, that is a real nice, crisp sounding motor , it`s hard to make out the meter or gauge to the right of the HP reading, but it looks like a tachometer, and if so, a very low rpm reading ??
IMHO, a motorcycle built for racing and one for street riding shouldn't be compared. We don't compare top fuel dragsters to Honda Civics so we shouldn't with bikes either. Street ridden Stage 3 EVO's usually put out 85-95hp, have lumpy cams and aren't happy at low revs. They're not known to be particularly reliable.The bike in the video has plates on it. It doesn't sound like it has an aggressive cam, the exhaust isn't loud(they look stock) and it didn't build revs very fast as if the flywheel had been lightened. The bike exhibits none of the clues one would look for in a high performance twin.I know that what you're saying is correct when it comes to race engines. I am also very confident that the bike in this video has less than 100hp and that the dyno was calibrated by a meth addled simpleton.