
Ivan
Moderators: oldjapanesebikes, H2RICK, diamondj, Suzsmokeyallan
Vintageman wrote:Ivan,
When you make that graph you start low rpm and crack throttle wide open, hold it there, until it reaches max rpms. So really it’s just the main jet circuit being graphed?
This is correct but includes the needle length and tip diameter.
I know from your other posts you tune all throttle position circuits that a Mikuni provides. How to you graph/test that to know a given circuit is better?
Exhaust gas tests prove everything
For example, I try to do the same thing you see people on dyno videos, but instead of wide open I would try all the positions each help steady fixed and let it rev up to see how it behaves throughout power range. That is more how one drives on the street in a mildly aggressive fashion if I can coin the style. By mildly I mean changing to a fixed throttle position well under WOT and hold it, by aggressive I mean letting the bike a rev a ways into the power band versus shifting early in rpms
This engine will easily run for the red zone with 1/8th throttle in the lower gears (on the road) with the carbs set up the way that they are.... and transition from one circuit to another seamlessly that you cannot feel anything.... cruising at light throttle has much less intake noise due to the proper relationship between the pilot/needle/needle jet.
The amount of throttle to keep the bike moving is considerably less than with stock jetting.
I have found my 75 T500 very very tough to tune perfectly everywhere with the Mikuni circuits provided and using stock needle jet and jet needle only That is changing, clip position (even half position), pilot jet and main jet size only. Same true with round slide only the stock one I have or can find
That's because the stock parts are junk... a waste of time that cannot ever work properly by my standards.... needle tapers are wrong, needle jet is the wrong size...
Here is what I see (funny analogous to that graph but different metrics).
Stock: Pilot a little a lean. Can be fixed with pilot jet OK,
Stock: Main lean and can be fixed by bigger main jet ok
Stock Needle Jet /Jet needle not good at all:
The challenge is the ¼ and ¾ range either too rich or too lean… The main jet can help ¾ and pilot can help ¼, but trade off is you compromise their main contribution.
Much more sensitive with my chambers (jemcos) on bike
You think you have it than temperature changes by 15 F and problems in one of those spots again.
This is because the stock parts are delivering the wrong mixture... the chambers will exaggerate the existing problems. When the jetting is correct at all the throttle positions, it won't be sensitive at all.
Did you see something similar I wonder?
More T500 info:
This challenge is with my 75 T500 as said. Later, I changed the cylinders to the early T500 ones. They have a lower intake floor. I run the later T500 carbs still and inatake items.
The jetting was real close and the only difference was maybe was the temp from last time I tuned it, not sure, but not too much difference with cylinder change only for sure.
I am not concerned with the porting differences...(at most this will be 1 main jet size if that)
The later boot and airbox makes a major difference to the main jet... I saw this on the dyno yesterday when I just swapped the later boot w/internal V-stacks for the stock early boot... it drowned in fuel by at least 4 main jet sizes.... maybe more.
I have the early carbs, intake boot, and air box, but for stock appearance/value I did not change. Also another gent on this board did not see any difference with early or late air box. I can verify that for the GT250 early and late made similar change to airbox (dame alter air boc onwith t500). I tried both and ended up with same main jet for either no gain in power as I hopped using early versus late air box.
Also confident I got most of the power back that was lost when Suz changed to later t500. I know the early t500 intake boot makes carbs closer to cylinder and carbs tipped to remove some kick in flow. But, I am very happy with the improvement just cylinders.
I also feel there is a reason those early carb venting design got dropped. For example if I change intake boot and air box, I would still use later carbs
If you ever looked at early t500 rubber intake interface to cylinder you will see that it isn’t that great a flow path alignment and there is a kink/lip. I think the later intake (Al part) is smoother fit even if longer and carbs level. Still we are talking peak power well under 8K rpm and don’t believe a tad shorter length adds a bean of power…. Maybe worse for longer better resonance tuned? Maybe wrong if real bored will try
Well this info of how I changed my bike is irrelevant. , say it for I think the jetting difference is more how carbs are vented.
I am interested in your kit for later T500 carb, but would like to know in general what you changed to see if it will improve my set up with chambers. I would like to for once tune that bike well centered and then it has enough margin to withstand a 15-20F temp change without significant gurgling from too rich or flat/pinging for too lean
There are many things wrong here... needle jet wrong size, needle taper starts too late, 2nd taper way too steep, end dimension too small, main jet too small. It is not possible to get everything right with the stock parts.
None of the kits that I sell are sensitive... it's sensitive because there are many things wrong.
Also any plans for the early GT550?
The lower throttle positions suck. Very small opening too rich when a little more position OK or visa-versa (new slide cut if I could find one). If no plans any advice?
Once again, I would work on something, but I need a bike...This also has to be done during the winter... This winter I have 6 ECU reprogramming R&D projects that I need to have ready by spring... the T500 is getting the spare moments this winter to hopefully be finished by spring.
Getting the small openings correct is quite a challenge...
Vintageman wrote:Love this site! What exactly are you referring to here?
Ivan,
You stated “Exhaust gas tests prove everything"
what is the theory behind exhaust gas as a criterion?
I use a CO tester on the old 2 strokes and most other engines that I tune... CO% is the most relevant gas when tuning... I have found this to be true after 25 years of doing this for a living.
I test all throttle positions throughout the rpm range... I do not disclose my gas readings as I consider them proprietary info.
Correct me if I am wrong, that data is still just for that WOT (main jet plus needle position to needle jet office at that throttle point) : Not other throttle positions.
The above dyno tests are just showing full throttle
If WOT test only, than you must have run tests trying for example ¼ throttle position or ¾ throttle position also?
Not recorded on the dyno... Just exhaust gas tests (these are not recorded) the same way that I have always done it for every other kit that I have made in the past.
Or are you saying WOT graph covered them too? confused.
If I run my 75 T500 WOT and pick a main jet that gives best result for the given location then if all I ever do when I ride is crack WOT no worries. Not typical for a street rider to always ride like that.
Nobody rides like that except a drag racer....
I would have never known my issues with needle taper (I agree with your results about needle) unless I used those position that expose them for example ¼ or ¾ throttle. And even here, issues when just a little off, may only show up at certain RPMs.
Clarification please
Are you saying you just tried that 1975 T500 and all you did was change the Y Boot and air box with the early type and then had to drop main jet size quite a bit? You did not change carb to cylinder boot?
The dyno chart with the 75 T500 is a 100% stock T500 vs. my 68 with my jet kit...
I installed a late model airbox boot onto my 68 and it drowned in fuel.... this is not on any of the charts. The point here is that it's restrictive and contributes to a smaller main jet.... it doesn't mean less HP... just increases fuel flow from the carb. There can be some intake restriction and still deliver full power, but main jet size will be different.
Did you get more power everywhere or did it rotate the power band? I did not try to rejet it with that boot.
I always take those air horns out.
Sure I did on my 75 T500 too (will check). On my 75 T500 I am running several steps above main jet called out for a stock 75 T500.
This would make sense because you decreased restriction... this doesn't mean that you make more power... the ass dyno doesn't work as well as a real one.
But, it was the cylinder swap with early 500 that woke up my 75 T500 last season....
I can't comment on this because I don't have late cylinders on my 68.... but testing on other bikes with minor porting changes doesn't have a major effect on jet sizes like intake restriction does. I also do my own testing to prove things out.
Raising the roof of the exhaust port 2mm and lowering the intake 4mm on my 75 H2 made no difference to the jet size on that bike as compared to the stock cylinders.
Changes in design between 68 500, 69 T500 and 75 T500 that can result in why the graphs are different.
I've done my research here.... I am aware of the things that were changed.
Design changes are.
1) Intake Port timing
2) Intake manifold (length and carb angle)
3) Carb (OK 68 is a 34mm others 32)
4) Y boot
5) Air Box
Graph observation.
a) Definite pivot point at about 5500 RPM.
i) 75 has more bottom end
ii) 68 has more top end
b) No real difference in max RPM
Ivan you say 2) 4) and 5) are more dominant than 1) for the T500 line
color=#0000FF]That's correct for any engine that i have tuned to this date.[/color]
So On my 75 I did 4) (by ripping out air horns) than 1) so far. I say (no proof) that pivot and power boost was much more significant for me when I did 1). I'll try 2) and 5)
Ivan,
When you sell the kit will you sell the early and late T500 separately or if similar Jet Needle for both for example will you combine as one kit?
I would like to try to sell the 32mm as one kit with specific instructions for both types of venting, but I'll see how it goes and what's actually needed because I haven't installed them yet or tested anything with them.
Thanks