Showing posts with label Carburetor Tuning. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Carburetor Tuning. Show all posts

Tuesday, 10 July 2012

TRUTH ABOUT BIG MUFFLERS/SILENCERS/EXHAUSTS




Royal Enfield guru Pete Snidal recently spotted something about the motorcycles.

"I notice one thing all the Bullets for sale seem to have in common - can you guess what it is?" he wrote.

Pete is the author of the acclaimed Royal Enfield Bullet owner's and workshop manual. He frequently chimes in on the Royal Enfield Yahoo message board to help troubleshoot problems owners experience.

But what could he possibly be seeing in the for-sale ads?

I guessed that maybe the Bullets listed for sale here tend to have low mileage. Obviously, some owners buy them and then sell them without riding very far. I was on the right track, but Snidal had something else in mind. He wrote:

"Look at all their exhaust systems. Something I discovered very early in life with Brit singles is that they became completely different machines with free-flowing (i.e., loud, requiring using your head about where and when to apply large gobs of throttle) exhaust systems. And that they were much less satisfactory when stock.

"An exception was the Velocettes with that monster Brooklands silencer, and the Goldstars, which already came with noisy mufflers. Some AJS/Matchless, too.

"My theory is that the owners who never 'bothered' with the first-stage mods, i.e., inlet and exhaust mods, just fell into the doldrums with their Bullets, and ended up putting them on the market. If you wonder, try putting your stock exhaust back on, and see for yourself.

"Instant Bow-Wow!"

Snidal was seeing the big, bazooka shaped factory muffler, which restricts performance, in the pictures of the bikes. Replacing it with a shorter and nosier silencer (and tuning appropriately) is an easy way to increase performance.

As Snidal observes, that makes for more owner satisfaction.



Big factory silencer affects performance.

credit : david blasco

Wednesday, 20 June 2012

"TAURAS" Turbocharged



























Thiruvananthapuram: A group of students of the Lourde Matha College of Science and Technology at Kuttichal, near here, has developed a turbo-charged engine for the Royal Enfield Taurus, the only diesel motorcycle in the Indian market.

V. Ganesh Nair, B.S. Harikrishnan, K.R. Rajeev and K. Shinju, all final-year students of Mechanical Engineering, developed the bike as part of their project work. They were assisted by R.J. Deepu, lecturer in the department.

The students used an imported Japanese turbocharger for the project.
Explaining the principle behind the turbocharger, Ganesh Nair says, “It is basically an air compressor driven by a turbine powered by the hot exhaust gas from the engine. As more air is inducted into the engine, better combustion of fuel takes place.”

“What we had in mind was to provide the bike with a more refined engine, albeit one with enhanced power and performance,” said Shinju.

The team opted for an imported unit after inquiries revealed that turbochargers for two-wheelers were not made in India. “The Japanese turbocharger was the smallest unit available and it suited the engine air flow requirement of the Taurus,” Harikrishnan said.

The students used parts from the Maruti car, Piaggio Ape three-wheeler and the Daewoo Cielo car to marry the turbocharger to the bike.

Tests carried out on the prototype in the college laboratory showed that the bike generated 15 per cent more power while fuel efficiency went up by five per cent. Road tests also proved that the vehicle was smoother than the factory model, with substantially lower vibration and noise.
“Above all, the modified engine had shed the diesel ‘thud’, the most jarring element of the bike,” says Ganesh Nair.

The students are now working on incorporating an intercooler and a technique to reduce the additional heat generated by the tweaked engine. The prototype cost Rs.17,000 and took seven months to complete.
“If Royal Enfield could incorporate our modifications, the Taurus can be relaunched in the market with little additional cost,” says Rajeev.


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Friday, 27 April 2012

Royal Enfield Pulse Air Valve


When an engine exhaust valve is open, the pressure in the exhaust manifold is higher than atmospheric pressure. The exhaust manifold is configured in such a way that positive and negative pulses are produced during the operation of the cycle by designing it as adiffuser.

The main function of Pulse Air Valve to burn the excess pollutants out of the exhaust.
The Pulse Air Valve make air sucked into the exhaust port to encourage heat into the exhaust flame and burn of exess carbons.

The Pulse Air Valve  has three openings one is connected to the manifold vacuum, another is connected to the exhaust pipe and the third is open to the atmosphere. When a negative pulse is induced in the exhaust, air from the atmosphere enters the exhaust manifold through a one-way reed valve and serves to oxidize the carbon monoxide and hydrocarbons in the exhaust.

This system consists of a spring-loaded diaphragm, and a shaft which is attached to the bottom. A manifold vacuum is applied over the diaphragm where the shaft end is towards the opening of the atmosphere.
During deceleration, the engine vacuum rises and acts against the spring to push the shaft downwards, thereby blocking the opening through which atmospheric air is passed to the exhaust.

The Royal Enfield Bullet, from year 2006-current, uses an Air Suction Valve to reduce emissions in its exhaust gases. Royal Enfield Motors calls their Air Suction Valve the PAV, or Pulsed Air Valve. Its function is the same, using a vacuum at the intake to trigger a valve that pulses atmospheric air into the exhaust. The original "iron barrel" style engine did this with a hose from the PAV going to the exhaust pipe, the newer (2003–2009) AVL aluminum engine pulses the gas directly into the exhaust port on the head of the engine itself.



Thursday, 26 April 2012

Back Pressure in Royal Enfield


“Back pressure is the pressure drop in the flow of gases from engine to exhaust. The less power engine has to spend making pressure to push the gases from exhaust output, the more power it can send to the wheels”.


The term back pressure is misleading as the pressure remains and causes flow in the same direction, but the flow is reduced due to resistance. For example, an automotive exhaust muffler with a particularly high number of twists, bends, turns and right angles could be described as having particularly high back pressure.


The exhaust having maximum bends will have the higher back pressure resulting in negative effect on engine efficiency resulting in a decrease of power output that must be compensated by increasing fuel consumption. Less back pressure makes engine able to transfer maximum power to wheels and keeps it less heated up.


The motorcycle's exhaust pipe is connected to the cylinders in the engine. When the engine is operating, it circulates gas throughout the system. The gas expands as it circulates through the engine, then finds its way into the cylinders. Some of the gas is not expelled out of the exhaust pipe, and it then creates exhaust back pressure. All of the gas pressure should leave out of the cylinders and into the exhaust pipe at a constant rate. If the rate is thrown off balance, then you have the result of exhaust back pressure in your motorcycle. Many believe that there is no effect on your engine when motorcycle exhaust back pressure is formed. Either way, it is not normal for exhaust back pressure to occur.


Back pressure caused by the exhaust system of an automotive four-stroke engine has a negative effect on engine efficiency resulting in a decrease of power output that must be compensated by increasing fuel consumption.  



Free Flow silencers has less back pressure than that of stock silencers that is why we bulleteers prefer louder sound but the fact behind it that a free flow silencer helps in less heating up of engine and louder sound as we alwayz want.



Royal Enfield Bullet CLUB



Friday, 13 April 2012

TUNING AND USING BULLET MIKCARB CARBURETTORS



The Standard Carburettor fitted to 350 and 500 Royal Enfield India Bullets is a Mikcarb, a copy, made under licence, of the popular Japanese Mikuni. The 350 Bullet uses a flange-mounted 24mm bore version and the 500 Bullet uses a 28mm bore, mounted
on a rubber stub. The other details are similar for both.

The way Mikcarbs are originally jetted means that any modifications to the air filter or exhaust system, especially in the colder UK climate, normally make it necessary to alter the carburettor settings.

Before blaming the carburettor for poor performance, hard starting, back-firing etc. a few simple checks should be done. Engines need a supply of clean, fresh petrol. Pull the fuel supply pipe off the carb, turn on the fuel tap and run off a small amount of petrol into a clean glass jar. Stale petrol has an unmistakable smell; rust or water will quickly settle to the bottom of the jar.
A common fault is an air leak due to a perished intake rubber or over-tightened flange. Leaks will cause the exhaust to smoke and engine speed to rise.

Next stage is to check on the ignition. After a short run, remove the plug and check the colour and condition of the tip. A sooty plug shows an over-rich mixture, a ‘hot’ nearly white plug tip shows a weak mixture and a hot running engine.


                     


The firing-ends shown in the photograph above are all considered ‘good’ by NGK technicians.
Our experience is that on Bullets ideally the plug tip should be slightly sooty, indicating a slightly rich mixture.

Now test the spark, which should be blue, snappy and strong. A low battery, dirty or worn points or a weak condenser will all give a weak, yellow spark and produce similar symptoms to carburetion problems. A new spark plug (short reach for a 350, long reach for the 500) might be all you need. When fitting the spark plug, lightly smear the threads with copper grease, replace the plug with your fingers, screwing in the plug with your fingers until it is ‘seated’, tighten no more than a quarter turn with a plug spanner. Take care not to over-tighten the plug—overtightening spark plugs is a common cause of thread damage, which can be costly to repair.
If none of these steps cure your bike’s problems then turn off the fuel, and unscrew the carb top from the body. Carefully lift out the slide.

Remove the carb — but beware as petrol will spill from the float chamber, so be certain that there is nothing to cause a fire. Working on a clean surface, turn the carb over and remove the four screws which hold the float bowl.

Ease the float bowl away from the main carb body (a quick tap with the handle of your
screwdriver will release the gasket’s hold). Tap the float spindle out, lift the float assembly away and tip the float needle out. Check the float for leaks – a quick shake will show if there is petrol inside the float. Clean the float needle with a spray of carb cleaner. The spring-loaded plunger must be free moving. Replace the float needle, float assembly and spindle. With the carb held upside down and the float chamber gasket removed measure from the carb body surface to the top of the float, as shown below. The standard measurement is between 24-26mm (see picture).

                                      


If necessary the float height can be adjusted by gently bending the tangs located between the two brass floats.

With the float bowl removed the jets will be seen in the centre of the carburettor (see the picture below). Now is the time to remove the pilot and main jets, to clean them, check their sizes or change them.

With a suitable screwdriver carefully unscrew and remove the main jet with its washer – the washer may need to be carefully prised out of its housing. The main jet screws into the base of the needle jet. The needle jet cannot be removed from this end of the carb.

To remove the needle jet, detach the carb top and remove slide, unscrew the main jet (as just described) and tap the needle jet up into the carb body. Refitting is the reverse of this procedure. Be careful on refitting that the slot in the bottom end of the needle jet locates in the spigot in the base of the jet housing (see picture below) – it may help to use long-nose pliers. Take care not to cross-thread the main jet in the needle jet and don’t over-tighten.

NOTE: In certain cases the needle jet may not screw fully into the main jet. There are two types of jets, each with a different thread pattern, to prevent a jet of one type being substituted for a jet of the other type.

The pilot jet is the small jet located in the deep drilling next to the main jet (see the picture). To remove the pilot jet unscrew it carefully with an appropriate flat blade screwdriver and gently shake it out of its housing.


If you have made changes to the air filter or exhaust system now is the time to fit new jets. Different air filters or silencers affect the amount of air the engine is able to ‘breathe’. As more air is drawn into the engine the ratio of petrol to air decreases, the result is a mixture weaker than the ideal of about 14 parts air to 1 part petrol. If the mixture is too weak the engine performance will be adversely affected—the engine may over-heat, with potentially serious damage to crucial engine components. The remedy may be to adjust the air screw and/or move the throttle needle clip but in most cases it will be necessary to replace the jets—the higher numbered jets let more petrol into the carburettor, giving a richer mixture.

There are three jets in the Mikcarb: the pilot jet (used at small throttle openings), the needle jet (used at throttle openings of about ¼ to ¾ - this jet is only available in a standard size for 350 engines) and the main jet (used from ¾ to full throttle).

The mixture at small throttle openings is also affected by the size of the cutaway in the throttle slide. The larger the cutaway (the higher the throttle slide number) the weaker the mixture, as more air is allowed into the carburettor. A smaller cutaway will, of course, give a richer mixture.

Fine adjustment to the mid-range may be made by raising or lowering the throttle needle. Release the throttle cable from the alloy block inside the slide. There is a small plate that
prevents the cable from accidentally detaching itself from the slide, note how the tag and slots are fitted. (The picture below illustrates the method used for fitting the throttle cable.) Unscrew the two screws, lift out the block and the needle will drop out. By refitting the clip in a lower groove you will richen the mixture (this raises the needle and so allows more fuel through the needle jet). Placing the clip in a higher groove weakens the mixture.

When reassembling be sure the slide locates in the peg projecting from the side of the carb (see the picture below). Take care that the throttle cable is routed without sharp kinks and has enough free-play for the slide to drop fully – even on full lock with the petrol tank in place. Replace the fuel pipe and check for leaks.

Setting the tick-over requires patient sequential adjustment of the pilot air screw and the throttle stop screw (see picture below). Turn the pilot air screw fully in and then out one and a half complete turns. Start the engine and allow it to warm-up thoroughly. When the engine will run cleanly without the enrichment of the mixture provided by the use of the cold start plunger, close the starting jet by lifting the cold starter lever to its horizontal position.





• Adjust the throttle stop screw so the engine runs at a fast tick-over, say about 20%
above the idle speed you wish to achieve
• Unscrew the pilot air screw to increase the engine speed to its fastest possible
• Gradually unscrew the throttle stop screw to reduce engine speed to the target idle
speed
• Again unscrew the pilot air screw to increase engine to the highest tick-over possible
• Finally, gradually unscrew the throttle stop screw to reduce engine speed to the correct idle speed. (Usually this process carried out twice – as described – will be sufficient to achieve a correct tick-over.)


Make a final check to see that all is well and the job is done.




Royal Enfield Bullet CLUB