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is their a cyl available thrue dasa/lamey that is setup for a 5mm stroke and 89-90mm bore.if so any idea on priceing
is their a cyl available thrue dasa/lamey that is setup for a 5mm stroke and 89-90mm bore.if so any idea on priceing
is their a cyl available thrue dasa/lamey that is setup for a 5mm stroke and 89-90mm bore.if so any idea on priceing
As far as I know, the big bore cylinders (89mm+) are only available for a the 6mm cranks and up that uses the kawasaki rods.
This was told to me by Kyle over at Dasa.
I would assume that if you got it as a kit instead of sleeves installed you could deck it to fit any configuration you need.
yes, the angles are too great.The rods are too short for what? Wouldn't cylinder decking take care of this?
Forgive me, I cant' quite picture why you couldn't cut down an 8mm cylinder to 5mm (Isn't this how the cast Lameys worked?)
What am I missing Steve?
Edit: Are you talking about angles being to great?
yes, the angles are too great.
I'm not saying it can't be done, it just isn't really reccommend it:dunno:
I know Pat from x-scream had one and it ran great but required alot of modifications
Thanks for chiming in Chucky!:biggthumpup: I knew it would make more sense from somebody that actually built one and knew what it involves.In the beginning of modified stroker cranks, there were no aftermarket tall cylinders back then so the 5mm cranks were fitted with the stock 125mm length rods to fit the OEM stock deck height cylinders.
As aftermarket cylinders started being made (Cast Lamey, Pro Tec's cast, Able Billet and I think the R&D and Riva was produced by Lamey) this is when we saw the cranks being fitted with the Kawasaki 750 rods that are longer @ 133mm, except that rad cranks made their own billet steel rod and a lot of them were 134mm long.
The big bore cylinder that Dasa/big bore cylinder use is the CR500 dirt bike piston, in order to use that piston you need a long rod because the piston skirts are very tall (very good for strokers) but limit you if you try to build a short rod stroker crank.
I have done it, but not builder friendly as it was a lot of work to get it to fit and just barely worked.
88mm bore X 73mm +5 stroke= 888cc's
Harry @ groupk got around some of these defaults by have Wiseco make custom pistons and using a lesser stroke to his exact spec's to fit his new stock stroke kits. (very pricey pistons/and no way to buy them except through him, just like the R&D, Riva's and the Jap big bore pistons that 'O' is looking for)
Eh....I take it that 5mm on the DASA cylinders is just fine. It's a crank issue. Right? :biggrin:
And you can order it as a kit in order to make it into a 5. Right? :biggrin:
If you do any 2 stroke studies, you will learn that it's much easier to make more power though a smaller bore vs. a larger bore due to more efficient filling when confined by a cc rule or a $$ budget.
This is common sense engine building to me, but it took me many years!
:Eyecrazy:
hmm this is the part I find interesting,Few questions here.Small strokers at the same cc as large stock stroke big bores has always felt more powerful to me? why is this?
Chuck could you give us a ball park hp of a 5 mill stroker and how much Hp is gained at each larger mill up to most freeride setups at 8,assuming they all were running a typical dual 48 carb setup, bpipe,the usual suspects. How much hp is gained by taking these same setups to a larger bore as well?
I have a unkown older stroker hp pumps built myself,stock 62t cylinder.5 mil base plate,3 mil recessed domes,trying to figure out what crank and rods are in it,Rods have USA stamped in them. This motor was built yrs back so it had to have been avail then?decent machine work.
Ask PANCAKE PETE about his stock cylinder'ed 5mm stroker we built for him. (I know it's an 85mm bore/828cc) The point is you probably haven't ridden the right stroker package for freestyle port mapping.