What BHP would a standard zxr400 put out.
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kurty_22
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What BHP would a standard zxr400 put out.
What BHP would a standard zxr400 put out???
- deviant
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i believe claimed power is 62bhp.
prob about 50-55 by the time you get to the rear wheel tho.
anyone had a standard bike dynoed?
prob about 50-55 by the time you get to the rear wheel tho.
anyone had a standard bike dynoed?
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Kawasaki ZXR400 L3 - shiny
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- RedexRobB
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- Jamz
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- deviant
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guess i probably slightly overestimated the transmission losses then,
In the garage:
Kawasaki ZXR400 L3 - shiny
Suzuki DR800 - bouncy
1978 Suzuki GS400 - PROJECT RETRO RACER!
Kawasaki GPz500S - for sale soon
Honda CG125 BR-J - in bits
Kawasaki ZXR400 L3 - shiny
Suzuki DR800 - bouncy
1978 Suzuki GS400 - PROJECT RETRO RACER!
Kawasaki GPz500S - for sale soon
Honda CG125 BR-J - in bits
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- deviant
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yeah I have.
won't make a difference to the power output though.
won't make a difference to the power output though.
In the garage:
Kawasaki ZXR400 L3 - shiny
Suzuki DR800 - bouncy
1978 Suzuki GS400 - PROJECT RETRO RACER!
Kawasaki GPz500S - for sale soon
Honda CG125 BR-J - in bits
Kawasaki ZXR400 L3 - shiny
Suzuki DR800 - bouncy
1978 Suzuki GS400 - PROJECT RETRO RACER!
Kawasaki GPz500S - for sale soon
Honda CG125 BR-J - in bits
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- deviant
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)
not to the power output at any given rpm (ie what you see on your dyno chart)
may improve the dynamic response (ie how quickly the bike would accelerate) but the inertia of the sprocket is trivial compared even to the back wheel, let alone the mass of the bike and rider.
may also improve the handling due to less gyroscopic effect, but again this is trivial compared to the wheels.
the difference between crank and wheel output is purely how much energy is lost in bearings, gear meshes, the chain, and churning all your gearbox oil around.
may improve the dynamic response (ie how quickly the bike would accelerate) but the inertia of the sprocket is trivial compared even to the back wheel, let alone the mass of the bike and rider.
may also improve the handling due to less gyroscopic effect, but again this is trivial compared to the wheels.
the difference between crank and wheel output is purely how much energy is lost in bearings, gear meshes, the chain, and churning all your gearbox oil around.
In the garage:
Kawasaki ZXR400 L3 - shiny
Suzuki DR800 - bouncy
1978 Suzuki GS400 - PROJECT RETRO RACER!
Kawasaki GPz500S - for sale soon
Honda CG125 BR-J - in bits
Kawasaki ZXR400 L3 - shiny
Suzuki DR800 - bouncy
1978 Suzuki GS400 - PROJECT RETRO RACER!
Kawasaki GPz500S - for sale soon
Honda CG125 BR-J - in bits
- MonkeyBusiness
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- deviant
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renthal rear sprockets are aluminium alloy, standard is steel, so it's about 1/3 of the weight straight away. add the fact that the holes in the renthal ones are twice the size.MonkeyBusiness wrote:Jamz, you are 100% when you say that there is a vast weight difference between the Renthal rear sprocket and the standard ones.
They must weigh a quarter of the standard one. I think the few Renthal ones I have are made of Magnezium or something similar.
you pay for this with a shorter life than steel sprockets.
still doesn't make a difference to your dyno chart though
In the garage:
Kawasaki ZXR400 L3 - shiny
Suzuki DR800 - bouncy
1978 Suzuki GS400 - PROJECT RETRO RACER!
Kawasaki GPz500S - for sale soon
Honda CG125 BR-J - in bits
Kawasaki ZXR400 L3 - shiny
Suzuki DR800 - bouncy
1978 Suzuki GS400 - PROJECT RETRO RACER!
Kawasaki GPz500S - for sale soon
Honda CG125 BR-J - in bits
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sloweracing
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All dynos read different as well so dont do too much work on the BHP
My full race bike on one dyno showed 79 bhp and on a controlled dyno it showed 72 bhp at the end of the year after a good thrashing it showed 66 bhp so as you can see weather and climate can mate a lot of diffrence
On my website on Links there is a link to a dyno and some information on how they work click on Dyno - Pro
Who gets to the flag first thats what matters in racing
took me 5 years to work that out its not all power good all round set up
My full race bike on one dyno showed 79 bhp and on a controlled dyno it showed 72 bhp at the end of the year after a good thrashing it showed 66 bhp so as you can see weather and climate can mate a lot of diffrence
On my website on Links there is a link to a dyno and some information on how they work click on Dyno - Pro
Who gets to the flag first thats what matters in racing
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f17th
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