SXRguyinMA
Life's a beach
- Location
- Leicester MA
their sleds have only gotten worse since they stopped usin suzi engines lol
tigersharks used suzuki engines
the only reliability mine had in 100+ hrs of hard riding was me ingesting water and bending a rod.
Yamaha sucks ass, kawi rules, and fors and giggles suzuki's the best
let the fun begin
Been wondering this for a while now. All the modded yami motors seem to be trying to be like the kawi.
1. 6mm strokers
2. Flat top kawi pistons
3. Welding on kawi intakes to run kawi reeds
4. kawi couplers
Be a lot less work to drop a kawi in those superjets:scared:
enough with the pwctoday quality info...easy question. No one has really answered why people modify the yamaha motor to be like the kawi.
To answer the questions:
1. Strokers make more power. That goes for any engine. It's not emulating Kawi per say.
2. Flat top pistons - they bring the port timing down further. Nothing Kawi specific, the pistons just fit the purpose.
3. Larger intakes, more power.
4. Kawi couplers - yup, they're better.
are you on crack? :chairshot:
right from Kawi:
SJ-> :chairshot: <-SXR :biggthumpup:
its 781cc and rated for 80hp, so according to your figuring, with 5cc extra they make 8hp more
Seadoo/Rotax know how to make power.
RV, injection, and a real pipe = 110HP.
actually Wavedemon did.
smaller and lighter-plus its billet if you are talking about the umi- seems silly not to use a bolt on billet part over a cast one.
So did Wetbikes, no?
actually Wavedemon did..
I like Kawasaki's :bananalama:
The SXR is nicely layed out & cake to work on. After making stand up's for 30 years they got it right. The preform great stock & can become animals when properly modded:Banane26:
This past season I rode a couple 09 sj's.:cool2:1 stock & 1 wet piped limited. They both handled much better than the old rn sj. But that's all yamaha changed. Still haven't ungraded electrical or carbs all for more money than the sxr:thumbsdown:
Except for battery location.The SXR is nicely layed out & cake to work on
Yep the Yamaha transfer ports are aimed more toward the boost port opening and the roof angles are a bit steeper which gives the engine more bottom end power and fuel economy.
Porting the Kawi cylinders with similar angles will help, but they're more suited for racing then freestyle.
Keeping the roof angles steeper and the transfer ports aimed away from the exhaust port opening helps with keeping the air/fuel mixture in the cylinder at the lower rpm ranges.