- Location
- Great Pacific Northwest
Any of you guys bore the stock reduction nozzle too at the same time? What size did you go to?
85mm.
Any of you guys bore the stock reduction nozzle too at the same time? What size did you go to?
I was talking to a builder here yesterday about that exact thing...He said, taper bore to 85, since stock nozzles have taper on them from stock.You guys that said 85mm, did it have a taper angle at all or 85mm straight bore?
He was saying retain the same taper angle as stock to 85mm? I can do that. I work at a machine shop. Shouldn't be too hard hahaI was talking to a builder here yesterday about that exact thing...He said, taper bore to 85, since stock nozzles have taper on them from stock.
I dont think the taper matters at all. It's all about the radius at the smallest point.View attachment 318612
I completely agree with your last paragraph.
But look at the effects of doubling the length: very, very small compared to radius. And its not like you can really add that much volume with a small amount of taper.
If you cut the vanes out then the flow will become more turbulent than laminar and the whole equation goes out the window and flow drops.
I second what @tntsuperjet says about the 1021 TPE. He's an awesome engine/pipe builder and got my TPE 964 with oem 46 carbs flatwater flipping my surf layup BOB Gen2 (126lbs hull) so i could only imagine the 1021's Potential.This C2 hurricane hull with this short as hell X metal pole aren't very good for boat chasing anyways but I do have friends on the water that set me up behind their boats and the occasional random dude who just thinks skis are sick. So mostly what I'm doing is flat water. Our riding spot is a few miles by water from my house so I'm going to build a floating water trailer to pull behind a sit down or my pontoon that will carry our skis, that will take care of the fuel problem.
The bores have a taper (called a "draft") because of being a cast part, not because of any fluid dynamics black magic. It has a draft so the part releases from the mold. If the bores were machined from the factory then they'd be straight since this would be the most economical way to machine. Otherwise they'd have to be done via CNC or lathe to get a taper.I was talking to a builder here yesterday about that exact thing...He said, taper bore to 85, since stock nozzles have taper on them from stock.
You correct with pump tuning being the key. However all the reading in the world won't help much. Theory is great but as I've learned every ski is different. Even when built exactly the same. With out testing multiple nozzles and props it's hard to know whether or not it's actually correct.I need to do some serious reading on pump size, prop pitch, and reduction nozzles. I will agree with the gentleman who stated that bottom end isn't all you need. I don't think top end power is necessary either though. Bottom-mid range is where most of the action is going on for freestyle/free ride from what I've learned thus far. That's why I was glad to hear my ski has V-Force 3 reed blocks instead of Boyeson Rad Valve reed blocks. Coming from motocross V Force traditionally gives more mid range and a harder hit while Boyeson is more of a top end/smoothening out result. Granted jetskis and dirt bikes are much different but I feel like a lot of the technology is shared except the pump area which I would equate to gearing, tire selection and suspension mixed together.
The last thing I want to do is get a combination that is a nightmare because of my limited experience. For that reason I wish to take everything in steps.
I'm thinking pump first, whether it be a 144 or 148 mag but that's happening soon. After than MSD total loss. I'd like to play with that and see what kind of results I can get. Then after that carbs most likely. If I decide to retain the 38s then I'll do the blackjack mods. If I go bigger I'm still undecided on what size, I don't want to go too big to hurt my throttle response. I don't want to flip off idle, I'd rather do it more in the mid range which is where I try to ride anyways, a twitch of the finger away from being on the pipe.