Bill B wrote:
I think both, when we played with it a few years ago it was a blast to ride with a near-stock top end, immediate throttle response and just plain fun to ride.
Then Chris built what I consider to be one of the neatest top ends you will ever see, the ports are not huge but they make a lot of hp and torque. The intakes were blocked off and proper transfers run up the back of the cylinder, it is a work of art. Henry is talking about putting it on the dyno, my guess is 120-130, rear wheel hp, on pump gas. And due to the small size of the exhaust port and no intake port, it will probably be as reliable as a stock engine.
i think Bill nailed it on the head about Chris,s work. I wish i could say i am a two stroke guru and its all my own work but i cant. I have have made the phone company rich with all the calls to Chris,Bill and Gary C. The bike has Chris cylinders and his heads. I had to do some profile work to the bottom transfer ports and cut the squish to get the comp correct but that,s all.
The only difficult part for me was getting the cases to line up after all the welding. The top case moved over 025 tho at the right hand side where they came together and clamped on the bearing. when i tightened the case bolts the bloody crank locked up. I had to make a dummy crank and had the cases heat treated with the dummy crank installed to take the stress out and get the top case to finaly come back in line. I have posted pictures of the cylinders a while back.Over the winter i am planning to get the bike to Bill so he can get it dynoed and make sure the carburation is correct.
But the biggest surprise to me was the fact that the bike runs so well considering the connecting rods are in the way of the inlet port and which every good two stroke tuner knows causes the inlet charge to get messed up, go figure