Yesterday I removed the 1/4" valve and drilled the nipples out as far as I dared. It had not come to mind that the sizing is the tube size not the opening(I know this just didn't occur to me at the time). The original opening was probably between 1/8 and 3/16. Drilling it made the flow much greater. Low end was improved slightly but midrange seemed a bit better. The bike was pretty snappy when accelerated from below 10mph.
At just under 30 it begins to 4stroke which I attribute to restricted exhaust flow, my built in rev limiter.
Actually now the bike is faster than it was but only in acceleration top end is the same. The more immediate response is the difference.
KC is right about the longer intake doing the same thing. The only difference is then your are tuning the intake tract and that requires some times longer runners than are easily practical for ideal tuning. Also I assume it to be tuned for a specific range?
I don't think the valve affects much over early midrange, but its overall affect would appear the whole range due to the fact it pulls cleanly and strongly to the top, since excess fuel from reversion is mostly eliminated.
Interestingly with the larger opening in the valve the flutter of the valve disc is now audible, its not objectionable but you can hear it. I have been trying to listen for when you cant, that would indicate when the flow through the tract is all positive(or nearly so), but I cant tell.
Now that I have a nipple in the intake. I may do as Snork suggested and run over to Tractor Supply and buy a big graduated syringe and experiment with boost bottle displacements. Be nice to stack up the data between the two systems.
It occurs to me that a decent/cheap boost bottle can be made from PVC pipe and caps. The cap can be drilled and tapped for pipe fittings and the displacement can be easily determined before gluing it all together. The above syringe can be used to determine the displacement. I doubt the seals on the syringe will last very long in the fuel environment but probably long enough for teating.
At just under 30 it begins to 4stroke which I attribute to restricted exhaust flow, my built in rev limiter.
Actually now the bike is faster than it was but only in acceleration top end is the same. The more immediate response is the difference.
KC is right about the longer intake doing the same thing. The only difference is then your are tuning the intake tract and that requires some times longer runners than are easily practical for ideal tuning. Also I assume it to be tuned for a specific range?
I don't think the valve affects much over early midrange, but its overall affect would appear the whole range due to the fact it pulls cleanly and strongly to the top, since excess fuel from reversion is mostly eliminated.
Interestingly with the larger opening in the valve the flutter of the valve disc is now audible, its not objectionable but you can hear it. I have been trying to listen for when you cant, that would indicate when the flow through the tract is all positive(or nearly so), but I cant tell.
Now that I have a nipple in the intake. I may do as Snork suggested and run over to Tractor Supply and buy a big graduated syringe and experiment with boost bottle displacements. Be nice to stack up the data between the two systems.
It occurs to me that a decent/cheap boost bottle can be made from PVC pipe and caps. The cap can be drilled and tapped for pipe fittings and the displacement can be easily determined before gluing it all together. The above syringe can be used to determine the displacement. I doubt the seals on the syringe will last very long in the fuel environment but probably long enough for teating.
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