my buddy goes 40+ with a 44 tooth sprocket and his bike seems fine. I know people say high revs are bad for these things but has anyone heard of a engine blowing from working too hard?
yes! +points for mythbuster reference!actually, downhill might count, in this case. if he were going full throttle downhill at 40mph with a 44 tooth sprocket, he'd be overrevving it so bad it could blow.
by my mythbusters reasoning, i'd say this one's plausible...
for me 6000 is good, but i have heard they can safely do 7000what is the max rpm these engines should be at?
it sounds plausible to me. because the con rod will stretch a very small amount at high rpms, and if it was used to being at low rpms i can see how it would wear a ring at the top of its stroke, but i think the engine would needed to have been used for something like a military generator or some application where it was run at a constant rpm for most of its life, then revved up. i had an old 4 cycle lawn mower that was about 30 years old. it was used as a lawn mower the whole time and one day i by passed the governor and revved it up, it was good for about an hour then it lost compression and died, i just chucked it, but maybe what your speaking of applys to 4 cycles as well?I remember reading about two cycles that have kept a low rpm for awhile. This will wear a grove in the head, then when the engine is revved up high the rings catch on the grove, causing engine death.
It might be an old wife's tail but it might have a grain of truth in it.
Mike Frye the bike guy