ok, so how much weight do you think is too much for a bike engine car? (thinking engines around 100hp)
would 1000lb or less be the idea weight?
ok, so how much weight do you think is too much for a bike engine car? (thinking engines around 100hp)
would 1000lb or less be the idea weight?
Here's a stock 1340 Hayabusa motor pushing 1,310# around Summit Point just fine. For street use, gear it correctly, and buy a good clutch pack.
motomoron wrote: For street use, gear it correctly
Wich is often easier said than done. For street use, the close ratios do not typically allow for both a good 1st gear and a good top gear.
Gearing, oiling, having the right clutch and having a "cush pack" put back into the driveline are much more important, weight is almost a non-factor.
There was a bike engined low cost that appeared at High Plains Raceway a while back. It was cool. However, it was not fast.
When I started Dwarf car racing in 97 the gsxr1100's (1052 oil cooled motors) hauled ass in a dwarf that was 1380lbs per the rule book. never a clutch or trans problem unless the racer used wrong rear end gears and tried to race in second gear. When I go out in 2012 the stock 2002 gsxr 1000 was working great hauling 1240lbs
The real limit seems to be the drive shafts. Most adapters use the spicer PTO slip joint pattern and the tube that is for that size is small diameter and the shafts are long they typical run just over the 3rd critical speed of the shaft. If you can use a shaft with a center section as this will raise the critical speed of the shaft section back to a safe place and let you gear the rear low so you have more useful lower gears in the trans. with a 74inch roll out 4:10 or 4:30 would work great on the street.
yamaha wrote: In reply to LuxInterior: Actually most cars have a better coefficient of drag than bikes.
cd is equally as important as frontal area, and cars tend to have LOTS more frontal area!
Sanity check - a 170ish HP sportbike is often/usually artifically limited to 186mph, whereas a 170hp car will be drag limited at 130-140mph.
In reply to Knurled:
This is true, but when you have similar power to weight ratios, cars always have the advantage in top speed.
0versteer wrote: ok, so how much weight do you think is too much for a bike engine car? (thinking engines around 100hp) would 1000lb or less be the idea weight?
Used as a wheel chock, and placed properly, nearly any motorcycle motor can handle vehicles weighing many thousands of pounds.
As jack stands, they are not as useful, the fins bend, and they are not too stable.
yamaha wrote: In reply to Knurled: This is true, but when you have similar power to weight ratios, cars always have the advantage in top speed.
Power to weight has nothing to do with top speed, it's power to drag.
im not used to forums where people actually have useful opinions haha.
i have an MG midget, and a gsxr 1000 engine.
i was just curious if it was a feasible idea to combine the two.
i've been going over this build here and have come to the conclusion its more work than its worth.
we're the good kind of enablers, we will enable anything AND brainstorm ways to make it actually work
That build is stupid . Who cares if the engine holds together, the old car frame not self destructing is the real killer at 500 hp
0versteer wrote: im not used to forums where people actually have useful opinions haha. i have an MG midget, and a gsxr 1000 engine. i was just curious if it was a feasible idea to combine the two. i've been going over this build here and have come to the conclusion its more work than its worth.
Damn you. Niw im looking fir an lbc again.
Slyp_Dawg wrote: we're the good kind of enablers, we will enable anything AND brainstorm ways to make it actually work
Your idea of "good" is a strange and sadistic one.
I think the neatest way to do a bike engined car would be to drive the original transmission with the bike transmission. That way you get the close gearing of the bike transmission times five different ranges, and you get reverse too. If that is excessive, you could eliminate all but two of the forward gears and have low and high ranges. And reverse.
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