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33 bhp on the new r6

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edd
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PostPosted: 15:53 - 20 Jul 2006    Post subject: 33 bhp on the new r6 Reply with quote

I just had a thought about the new r6:
It has fly by wire throttle control, surely given that the throttle can be controlled by the ECU the bike could be re-mapped in order to give 33bhp from wherever the bike makes 33bhp in the first place. Ie. not knocking off any off the bottom end like a normal restrictor kit does. Just thought it would make the bike a hell of a lot more rideable than a standard restricted bike. (Its still fairly academic to my situation since theres no way i could afford a new R6) what do you guys think?
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Keir
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PostPosted: 16:00 - 20 Jul 2006    Post subject: Reply with quote

i think that with the lack of bottom end the new R6 has you would have one very rubbish bike.
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MarJay
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PostPosted: 16:20 - 20 Jul 2006    Post subject: Reply with quote

Won't work.

The bike may have electronic fuelling but it isn't infinitely variable.

Not only this, the cams, intake manifold shape, valve area, and exhaust are all fixed. All of these things would need to change in order to make the bike 33bhp with a huge bulging midrange.

Power is just a function of torque and revs, so restricting the revs would cut the power, but the power delivery of the new R6 would not lend itself to sub 33bhp riding from what I hear.

So I don't think it would work.
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edd
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PostPosted: 16:54 - 20 Jul 2006    Post subject: Reply with quote

Im not talking about EFI, On the new R6 the throttle is opened and closed by the ECU, and that is most definitely fully variable. ie you twist the throttle, that sends an electrical signal to the ECU, and the ECU then opens the actual throttle plates. Throttle plates are essentially a variable restriction. Im well aware that power is a function of torque and revs, that is exactly the point.

At low revs the throttle could be held wide open until the point in the rev range that acheived 33bhp was reached, at that point more revs = more power, so if the throttle was progressively closed by the ECU as revs increased, torque would fall as revs increased meaning that power would remain steady at 33bhp, all the way thorugh the rev range. Im aware that the new R6 is supposed to be all revs, and has no midrange to start with, but it is the only bike that I know of with a fly by wire throttle, if the idea would work in principle then it could be applied to other bikes.
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Slickfish
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PostPosted: 16:55 - 20 Jul 2006    Post subject: Reply with quote

I think any bike that produces alot of power needs to produce that to feel rite.
if your looking at 33bhp, loo at 400's SV650's etc they are around 60-80bhp, and light.
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MarJay
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PostPosted: 17:04 - 20 Jul 2006    Post subject: Reply with quote

edd wrote:
Im not talking about EFI, On the new R6 the throttle is opened and closed by the ECU, and that is most definitely fully variable. ie you twist the throttle, that sends an electrical signal to the ECU, and the ECU then opens the actual throttle plates. Throttle plates are essentially a variable restriction. Im well aware that power is a function of torque and revs, that is exactly the point.

At low revs the throttle could be held wide open until the point in the rev range that acheived 33bhp was reached, at that point more revs = more power, so if the throttle was progressively closed by the ECU as revs increased, torque would fall as revs increased meaning that power would remain steady at 33bhp, all the way thorugh the rev range. Im aware that the new R6 is supposed to be all revs, and has no midrange to start with, but it is the only bike that I know of with a fly by wire throttle, if the idea would work in principle then it could be applied to other bikes.


I don't think you can change the amount of torque a bike makes at a set RPM with the throttle.

So at 5000RPM the bike will make say 40bhp, and it will always be making 40bhp at 5000RPM.

You'd need to change the torque the bike makes at that RPM which would involve cam, inlet and exhaust changes.

The throttle just is an indirect control of RPM.
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proximity
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PostPosted: 17:12 - 20 Jul 2006    Post subject: Reply with quote

Of course the throttle changes torque otherwise you wouldnt accelerate from your current RPM when you twist the throttle.
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johnsilva
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PostPosted: 17:27 - 20 Jul 2006    Post subject: Reply with quote

restricting bikes to 33bhp should not be allowed

problem solved
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8316
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PostPosted: 17:28 - 20 Jul 2006    Post subject: Reply with quote

the new r6 is rubbish unless you are constantly giving it beans-it has no torque!
a restricted r6 will be truly pants-go for a bike with some midrange!
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proximity
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PostPosted: 17:29 - 20 Jul 2006    Post subject: Reply with quote

I agree its a completely pointless idea, unless you had like a switch so you could unrestrict it whenever you like.
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johnsilva
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PostPosted: 17:31 - 20 Jul 2006    Post subject: Reply with quote

cough "like a seven" cough
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MarJay
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PostPosted: 19:09 - 20 Jul 2006    Post subject: Reply with quote

proximity wrote:
Of course the throttle changes torque otherwise you wouldnt accelerate from your current RPM when you twist the throttle.


Yes but the revs change instantly in reaction to that.

What he is saying is varying the torque and keeping 33bhp across a 10-15 thousand RPM range. I suspect the R6 makes 33bhp about 4 or 5 thousand revs. This would need variable cam timing, ignition, fuelling, and inlet and exhaust shape.
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8316
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PostPosted: 22:13 - 20 Jul 2006    Post subject: Reply with quote

Just checked the R6 power curve-makes 33bhp at 5k, but only 28ft lb torque. compared to the 675 it makes 42ft lb!!!!!!!!!!! makes 33bhp at 4k an all.
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edd
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PostPosted: 13:06 - 21 Jul 2006    Post subject: Reply with quote

This thread is not about choosing a bike, I already have 2, both of which have over twice 33bhp its about an idea. The throttle is called a throttle because it "throttles" the engine, preventing it from revving to redline from when you turn the key. The throttle is a restriction much like the restrictor washers fitted to restricted bikes, only it can be adjusted from a massive restriction (where your bike sits at idle) and (virtually) no restriction where your bike is at full throttle. Throttle position and RPM are 2 entirely different things. If they werent EFI systems wouldnt need to know Throttle position as well as RPM. Revs do not change instantly in reaction to throttle, you can apply full throttle up a very steep hill in a high gear and your revs will not climb very quickly at all. If the R6 makes 33bhp at 5k then by progressively closing the throttle as revs increase it should be able to maintain a steady 33bhp. This wouldnt need variable cam timing, ignition, fuelling, and inlet and exhaust shape the throttle directly controls the amount of air which can enter the engine, subsequently the EFI system adds the correct amount of fuel to this air. Normal restriction works by reducing the maximum inlet size, in exactly the same way the throttle would. BUT by having a fixed restrictor it limits the amount of torque which can be made at low rpm, knocking out midrange. Im not suggesting the R6 is a good bike to have restricted as I have previously mentioned, but that isnt the point of this thread.
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johnsilva
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PostPosted: 13:16 - 21 Jul 2006    Post subject: Reply with quote

edd wrote:
If the R6 makes 33bhp at 5k then by progressively closing the throttle as revs increase it should be able to maintain a steady 33bhp.


Whats the point, when you can stick some washers in the inlets nice and easy


Anyway, like i said, 33bhp restrictions should be banned, just ride a bike that makes 33bhp or less as standard
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proximity
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PostPosted: 13:23 - 21 Jul 2006    Post subject: Reply with quote

I think the point is this way you can have 33hp throughout the rev range, instead of just a 33hp peak.
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fuzz
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PostPosted: 13:36 - 21 Jul 2006    Post subject: Reply with quote

proximity wrote:
Of course the throttle changes torque otherwise you wouldnt accelerate from your current RPM when you twist the throttle.


The throttle allows more air/fuel into the engine. As a result, the engine runs faster, leading to an increase in torque. The torque does not create the faster engine speeds, it is the other way round. Think about it - torque is another name for turning force. The pistons movement is linear; it is the conrod that creates the force on the crankshaft, which, because it's turning, produces torque. How do you produce more torque? Increase the linear force creating it. In an engine, this means pumping in more fuel.

As for the original question, I don't think it would work. If the ECU started closing the butterfly valves, the engine speed would slow i.e. it would introduce a rev limit at the point where the bike makes 33bhp. Throttle position and RPM are not 2 different things. How wide you open the throttle is directly related to how fast the engine can alter its speed. This is what I believe, I could well be wrong of course.
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edd
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PostPosted: 14:11 - 21 Jul 2006    Post subject: Reply with quote

fuzz wrote:
Throttle position and RPM are not 2 different things. How wide you open the throttle is directly related to how fast the engine can alter its speed. This is what I believe, I could well be wrong of course.


Put your bike on its stand, hold the throttle 1/4 open and your bike will redline. Throttle position IS different to RPM the proof above shows it. Throttle position will not change RPM if the bike is under load. The throttle plate acts as a restriction all the time the engine is not at full throttle, this is all that prevents your bike from constantly redlining. The ECU will not be creating a rev limit, as the throttle will still be partially open, allowing the bike to continue to increase revs right up to the redline. The idea of this is to make the bike have 33bhp from 5k upwards, you might not see the point in this, but a bike which makes 33bhp all the way through the rev range will be MUCH faster than one that makes 33bhp peak, since at 5k the 33bhp peak bike will probably be making 11 or 12 bhp.
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NSR Mick
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PostPosted: 14:12 - 21 Jul 2006    Post subject: Reply with quote

[quote="johnsilva"]
edd wrote:
Anyway, like i said, 33bhp restrictions should be banned, just ride a bike that makes 33bhp or less as standard


I fully agree with you there mate.

What is the point in spending £7500 (RRP) on the latest all singing all dancing 600cc sports bike and then getting it restricted.

For one you'd look a tit when I outdrag you from the lights on my 15yr old £1500 bike and clear off into the distance.

whatever happened to working your way up lik I did when I was younger.
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8316
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PostPosted: 14:20 - 21 Jul 2006    Post subject: Reply with quote

gsxrmick wrote:


What is the point in spending £7500 (RRP) on the latest all singing all dancing 600cc sports bike and then getting it restricted.

For one you'd look a tit when I outdrag you from the lights on my 15yr old £1500 bike and clear off into the distance.


imagine the R6 getting beaten by an rs125 at the light!! Laughing haha.
i agree on not getting bikes restricted to 33bhp-just sounds stupid to me, looking fast but being in fact dog-slow. hence the reason why i'm still riding the gs125 and my fireblade is sitting in the garden til november when i can ride the full 65bhp!!
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MarJay
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PostPosted: 14:25 - 21 Jul 2006    Post subject: Reply with quote

edd wrote:

Put your bike on its stand, hold the throttle 1/4 open and your bike will redline. Throttle position IS different to RPM the proof above shows it. Throttle position will not change RPM if the bike is under load. The throttle plate acts as a restriction all the time the engine is not at full throttle, this is all that prevents your bike from constantly redlining. The ECU will not be creating a rev limit, as the throttle will still be partially open, allowing the bike to continue to increase revs right up to the redline. The idea of this is to make the bike have 33bhp from 5k upwards, you might not see the point in this, but a bike which makes 33bhp all the way through the rev range will be MUCH faster than one that makes 33bhp peak, since at 5k the 33bhp peak bike will probably be making 11 or 12 bhp.


We're talking about under load. All the throttle does is allow more air and fuel into the engine allowing it to spin faster. I really really don't think you can have a bike that makes 33bhp in a wide band of revs. You'd need to change the inlet shape, exhaust shape, ignition and cam timing (and lift).

Engines are very predefined. The point about a throttle is, it is an acceleration control. If a bike made 33bhp across a 10k rev range, it wouldn't get any faster. This can't work because if revs increased on a fixed gearing, then speed would increase.

I'm sorry but you are thinking about it the wrong way.

We are making the assumption the engine is under constant load as it is on the road. We aren't talking about an engine in neutral. Even so when you measure the power of an engine, you can only do so under load, because it is its load moving potential that needs to be measured to measure power.

If you show me a dyno graph of a bike with a completely flat power curve (NOT torque curve) then I will believe you.
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8316
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PostPosted: 14:33 - 21 Jul 2006    Post subject: Reply with quote

MarJay wrote:


If you show me a dyno graph of a bike with a completely flat power curve (NOT torque curve) then I will believe you.
...

...which we all know is impossible, yes?
that would be some strange bike to ride though! as revs rise, the torque will drop dramatically..funfun Confused
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NSR Mick
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PostPosted: 14:34 - 21 Jul 2006    Post subject: Reply with quote

8316 wrote:
my fireblade is sitting in the garden til november when i can ride the full 65bhp!!


Dont you mean CBR400? CBR400's arent Fireblades, sorry.
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8316
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PostPosted: 14:36 - 21 Jul 2006    Post subject: Reply with quote

What came first? Cool 1-0 to me
If Honda had official paintjobs with "fireblade" written on it..... 2-0! Laughing
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edd
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PostPosted: 14:40 - 21 Jul 2006    Post subject: Reply with quote

Dyno graphs are always done at full throttle, if they were done at half throttle the would show much less power. I am trying to convey an idea to you that hasnt as far as I know yet been implemented, so i cant show you a dyno graph. My point is made very obvious by the fact that many FI bikes are restricted by having their throttle movement reduced, preventing the throttle from opening fully. My idea is EXACTLY like this, only I wouldnt be losing all my midrange like someone with a fixed throttle restrictor would be.

MarJay; get on your bike on a flat road, stick it in first and give the bike half throttle. Keep it there and gasp in wonder as the bike's revs climb and it hits the redline, change up and watch it do the same. It will only stop when the bike is not producing enough power to counteract the frictional forces acting on it. At this point you need MORE POWER to go faster. Opening the throttle further will give you more power and you will then be able to accelerate further. I agree that 33bhp restriction is stupid, but its ridiculous to say that throttle position doesnt affect power output, when it obviously does. If throttle position didnt affect power output how can bikes be restricted by throttle movement?
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