Ted
The pilot formerly known as Twin Engine Ted
- Joined
- Oct 9, 2007
- Messages
- 30,006
- Display Name
Display name:
iFlyNothing
This is the latest on the list of "Ted has too much brain power on his hands".
The scenario: Yes, my Harley is slow. It's a Harley, it will never be fast. It's a 2009 FLHTCUi (also known as Electra Glide Ultra Classic) with a 96" V-twin. It has some slip-on pipes (stock was way too quiet, although I still have the stock pipes), the catalytic converter has been removed, and the air filter has been upgraded, plus it has a piggyback tuner that I can program to adjust for modest horsepower changes.
It's an 850 lb bike. If I cared about it being fast I would've bought something else, but I would like it to be a bit faster than it is. So since I'm now looking at things to weld (and figuring out a project for after the Cobra)...
China is producing some reasonable quality cheap turbos. A lot of people are buying these $100 turbos (new) and have had good results with them so long as you're only looking for moderate gains and reliability. No, they're not as good as the real things, but they're ok. For $90 I can buy a brand new turbo that's designed for a VW 1.8T. Well, 96" = 1.6L and those VW 1.8T engines have very little lag from the factory, plus I'd only be looking for about 4-6 PSI of boost, so that'd probably work out reasonably well.
Making a turbo setup from scratch of course has its challenges, but I've got the equipment so it would be a fun project since I've never done that before. So a lot of it would be the purpose of doing the project for the fun of doing it.
Obviously reliability would go down, that's fine. I'm also thinking about other options that I could do that would be cheap overall. I can't find any sort of data on how much a stock 96" engine can take power wise before it just explodes. The big bore kits seem to be more invasive in terms of having to bore out the case. Cams could be another option that would be simple, although I've not seen much for data on what those would do.
So, suggestions on power adders for the Harley? I know Steingar will chime in with "Sell the Harley and buy a real motorcycle."
The scenario: Yes, my Harley is slow. It's a Harley, it will never be fast. It's a 2009 FLHTCUi (also known as Electra Glide Ultra Classic) with a 96" V-twin. It has some slip-on pipes (stock was way too quiet, although I still have the stock pipes), the catalytic converter has been removed, and the air filter has been upgraded, plus it has a piggyback tuner that I can program to adjust for modest horsepower changes.
It's an 850 lb bike. If I cared about it being fast I would've bought something else, but I would like it to be a bit faster than it is. So since I'm now looking at things to weld (and figuring out a project for after the Cobra)...
China is producing some reasonable quality cheap turbos. A lot of people are buying these $100 turbos (new) and have had good results with them so long as you're only looking for moderate gains and reliability. No, they're not as good as the real things, but they're ok. For $90 I can buy a brand new turbo that's designed for a VW 1.8T. Well, 96" = 1.6L and those VW 1.8T engines have very little lag from the factory, plus I'd only be looking for about 4-6 PSI of boost, so that'd probably work out reasonably well.
Making a turbo setup from scratch of course has its challenges, but I've got the equipment so it would be a fun project since I've never done that before. So a lot of it would be the purpose of doing the project for the fun of doing it.
Obviously reliability would go down, that's fine. I'm also thinking about other options that I could do that would be cheap overall. I can't find any sort of data on how much a stock 96" engine can take power wise before it just explodes. The big bore kits seem to be more invasive in terms of having to bore out the case. Cams could be another option that would be simple, although I've not seen much for data on what those would do.
So, suggestions on power adders for the Harley? I know Steingar will chime in with "Sell the Harley and buy a real motorcycle."