agreed, the company that comes out with a 4stroke frame mount kit with a reliable gearbox that works and is actually available will make a killing
In the nineties one of my 70s Yamaha 650 bikes was tested, and passed because someone at the emissions facility mistakenly classified it as a two stroke. When I compared its actual numbers to one of the other 650s, it was spewing way over the legal allowable limit. It was one of the rare occasions I kept my yap shutThe really funny and ironic thing is that these cheap HT 2 stroke engines DO meet current emissions standards. Spooky Tooth ran one through the AZ smog station and even with 20:1 mix, it ran WELL within allowable clean air standard limits for a 2 stroke.
Having said that, I'd really love to see a nice frame mount 4 stroke. compact & thin. We need something like this to allow a frame mount configuration for a 4 stroke. I'd buy one in a heartbeat. But, they just arent out there.
With the need to carry cargo on my bike, I can't use a rack mount.. just wont work for my needs in a bike.
The really funny and ironic thing is that these cheap HT 2 stroke engines DO meet current emissions standards. Spooky Tooth ran one through the AZ smog station and even with 20:1 mix, it ran WELL within allowable clean air standard limits for a 2 stroke.
So if I'm reading this correctly: Two stroke emission standards are set well below that of 4 stroke.In the nineties one of my 70s Yamaha 650 bikes was tested, and passed because someone at the emissions facility mistakenly classified it as a two stroke. When I compared its actual numbers to one of the other 650s, it was spewing way over the legal allowable limit. It was one of the rare occasions I kept my yap shut
Bicycle-Engines.com and FiveFlagsMotorbikes.com sell a 4 stroke, frame mount kit from Grubeeinc.com.Sounds good people, about how much is the 4 stroke kit, and is it more dependable than the 2-stroke??????
i'm not particularly business-minded, but i'll respond by saying: wow, eDJ! that is very interesting!Any business minded folks wish to respond ?
zoning laws, real estate cost, labor costs, environmental laws, taxes, etci'm not particularly business-minded, but i'll respond by saying: wow, eDJ! that is very interesting!
now here is what i don't understand: building little internal combustion engines is very old technology; why can't some outfit right here in the good old Estados Unidos tool up and manufacture, say, a nice little 4-stroke in response to a trend like motored bicycling? what are the hurdles that keep something like that from happening?
i meant an established manufacturer of small engines; sorry i wasn't clear.I think manufacturing your own motor is a pretty big hurdle.