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Author: Subject: what is the best chassis for a bike engine
rick1962uk

posted on 18/9/12 at 07:04 AM Reply With Quote
what is the best chassis for a bike engine

hi at last im going to start building a bike engine 7 just in the planning stage so a few thought to help out will be great
what chassis is the best to go with rons or haynes or are there any good premade ones out there for decent money i was going for a taylor racing one but there site looks like they dont make them any mooe but dont mind making one

this will be for track days only

many thanks rick

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adithorp

posted on 18/9/12 at 07:40 AM Reply With Quote
You'll probably get as many opinions as there are chassis.

Do a search on...

Raw Striker
RoadRunnerRacing SR2
MK Indy
MNR Vortex
Mac #1
Westfield
Sylva Riot

...and thats just for a start.





"A witty saying proves nothing" Voltaire

http://jpsc.org.uk/forum/

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mark chandler

posted on 18/9/12 at 07:58 AM Reply With Quote
I suggest you look for the lightest chassis when all built up, put a passenger into a BEC and it will slow down, do not start off heavy.

So if going for a home brew then Ron's over Haynes, its's smaller and lighter.

As it's for track look to land a full cage where tubes align so build the cage into the structure rather than place on top and use the correct tube as specified in the MSA blue book.


Regards Mark

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jossey

posted on 18/9/12 at 08:28 AM Reply With Quote
Not the tiger unless your off for a small engine.

My zzr1100 won't fit without 50mm out of top and 40mm under chassis.

Zx9r wouldn't fit without cut out either.

My old locost chassis worked well with zx9r and zzr1100





Thanks



David Johnson

Building my tiger avon slowly but surely.

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PAUL FISHER

posted on 18/9/12 at 08:47 AM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by rick1962uk
hi at last im going to start building a bike engine 7 just in the planning stage so a few thought to help out will be great
what chassis is the best to go with rons or haynes or are there any good premade ones out there for decent money i was going for a taylor racing one but there site looks like they dont make them any mooe but dont mind making one

this will be for track days only

many thanks rick


Stuart Taylor racing, are now called Aries Motorsport, link to there webb site below, great chassis and good value for money, nice and light weight

http://www.ariesmotorsport.co.uk/

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JimSpencer

posted on 18/9/12 at 08:48 AM Reply With Quote
Hi

Track use only moves the goalposts somewhat, so here's my 2p:-

Sylva Riot or something similar - i.e. rear mid engined..

Engines in the right orientation, simple install, no prop etc and hence it'll be very light..

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MikeRJ

posted on 18/9/12 at 09:10 AM Reply With Quote
A bike chassis would be ideal
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nick205

posted on 18/9/12 at 09:56 AM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by MikeRJ
A bike chassis would be ideal



hehehe, that made me chuckle






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twybrow

posted on 18/9/12 at 11:14 AM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by PAUL FISHER
quote:
Originally posted by rick1962uk
hi at last im going to start building a bike engine 7 just in the planning stage so a few thought to help out will be great
what chassis is the best to go with rons or haynes or are there any good premade ones out there for decent money i was going for a taylor racing one but there site looks like they dont make them any mooe but dont mind making one

this will be for track days only

many thanks rick


Stuart Taylor racing, are now called Aries Motorsport, link to there webb site below, great chassis and good value for money, nice and light weight

http://www.ariesmotorsport.co.uk/


+1 vote here too. Great chassis and fits a bike engine well. The only issue you may have is the height of your chosen engine as the Aries/ST is quite low compared to others.

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TimC

posted on 18/9/12 at 11:49 AM Reply With Quote
For track days only I'd go for a Procomp chassis. See www.procomp.co.uk

To be honest, you'll have to ask them nicely to do the bike mounts for you but they are good guys! Being Live axle the only engine that you can really use will be an R1 1998-to-2008. Plenty of choice.






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bi22le

posted on 18/9/12 at 05:02 PM Reply With Quote
+1 for the lightest you can find and build.

If your out and out track then it needs to be small and light. The smallest cars I know of are

RTR (road track race) Atomic
Sylva R10T
RAW Striker.

RTR Atomic is single seater but with the engine next to the driver for optimum COG. These cars are tiny!





Track days ARE the best thing since sliced bread, until I get a supercharger that is!

Please read my ring story:
http://www.locostbuilders.co.uk/forum/13/viewthread.php?tid=139152&page=1

Me doing a sub 56sec lap around Brands Indy. I need a geo set up! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EHksfvIGB3I

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rick1962uk

posted on 18/9/12 at 05:58 PM Reply With Quote
MANY THANKS SOME GREAT CHOICES ENGINES NO PROBLEMS AS IM A MOTORCYCLE ENGINEER FULL TIME TUNER / RESTORE SO LOADS OF ENGINE CHOICES BUT SEE WHAT I GET GIVEN
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snapper

posted on 19/9/12 at 05:50 AM Reply With Quote
quote:
Being Live axle the only engine that you can really use will be an R1 1998-to-2008. Plenty of choice.



Incurious Why only the R1 with a live axle????





I eat to survive
I drink to forget
I breath to pi55 my ex wife off (and now my ex partner)

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adithorp

posted on 19/9/12 at 07:24 AM Reply With Quote
I suspect he means because the inj' R1's have a higher final drive ratio than other bike engines, so work better with the available live axle diff ratios ???





"A witty saying proves nothing" Voltaire

http://jpsc.org.uk/forum/

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TimC

posted on 22/9/12 at 08:28 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by adithorp
I suspect he means because the inj' R1's have a higher final drive ratio than other bike engines, so work better with the available live axle diff ratios ???


Exactamundo Adi. Carb'd 'Blade is the other option but why would you these days?






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mark chandler

posted on 22/9/12 at 08:59 PM Reply With Quote



Exactamundo Adi. Carb'd 'Blade is the other option but why would you these days?


Easy emmisions, good power to weight and stick in a baffle plate and you are on the track so very cheap with a plentiful supply of replacements at under £400.

A good 893-919 blade car well driven will beat others and gears are perfect for fixed axle/cheap sierra ratio's, so cheap to start off with and cheap to keep going.

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