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FAO Ned
stevebubs - 27/4/06 at 11:47 PM

WTF? Who tried using a T9 as a reverse box? Or you just acting the fool (to quote Mr T)?

Oh - and whose Fury?

fury reverse box 2
fury reverse box 2


[Edited on 27/4/06 by stevebubs]


theconrodkid - 28/4/06 at 05:50 AM

what


ned - 28/4/06 at 06:12 AM

A friend of mine is building it. Got the engine running at the weekend once i got there and told himto bypass the side stand switch.

It a hyabusa and this is his experiment to see if you can run the old 4 speed box backwards in an attempt at a locost reversing box and also to drop the gear ratio to the rear axle.

Its currently mounted on some rubbers but twisted horribly on them when we tried to take it down the road. In the process of being modified, probably so the box is solidly mounted.

Ned.

ps before anyone shoots me down i would reiterate its not mine and I'm not very convinced it'll work and have told the owner as much but interested to see how he progresses with it!

[Edited on 28/4/06 by ned]


tks - 28/4/06 at 07:40 AM

180Bhp and 10.500 revs..

ok lets say in 6 5500 revs as output..

in a old 4 speed box

First of all its 30Kgs more!
and second it won“t be up to the job..
that box is made for torque not for revs..

i give it 100miles if it works..

Tks


ned - 28/4/06 at 08:20 AM

I think to get the gearing right he was going to run it in 3rd. I told him he'd be better running it in 4th as 4th is a 1:1 ratio so in my mind should be stronger and changing the dif ratio but hey ho.


stevebubs - 28/4/06 at 08:41 AM

quote:
Originally posted by tks
180Bhp and 10.500 revs..

ok lets say in 6 5500 revs as output..

in a old 4 speed box

First of all its 30Kgs more!
and second it won“t be up to the job..
that box is made for torque not for revs..

i give it 100miles if it works..

Tks


don't forget BECs have a final reduction gear as well as a main gearbox.

Revs at the gearbox will be the same whether BEC or CEC....it's directly related to the speed of the rear wheels.

What concerns me more is it's back to front so the loading on the box in normal operation is all wrong.

Ned - IIRC Tim Pell originally used a Rover gearbox in the first ZZR Genesis. This had all gears removed except 4th and reverse. Theorish is kinda sound but it's heavy....

I would also be concerned about the angle of the UJs between box and diff - looks quite acute from the picture.

Stephen

PS If he could afford a Busa, then I'm flabbergasted he didn't buy a proper box from someone. They're supposedly quite reliable now.


ned - 28/4/06 at 08:45 AM

Stephen,

I agree - he spent several hundred on uprated bits for the engine from extreme engines iirc. the reverse box with a drop gear was about £12-1500 i think he said.

He bought the car which was an ex-crossflow car without the engine and bought a bike from a salvage place so hes only spent about 6k on it afaik. he's only doing it as a winter project for a bit of fun. its already registered so will only need an mot - no sva to worry about.

he's openly said that he doesn't know how long the box''ll last running backwards he'll just wait and find out!


iank - 28/4/06 at 08:46 AM

Having 30 forward gears and 6 for reverse will keep him busy

Running the box backwards could be a big problem, as IIRC the gear teeth are profiled so are unlikely to be happy running backwards for long periods.

edit: just saw he knows about the problem. so long as he's going into it with his eyes open he should be ok (so long as it doesn't seize and do damage to the engine/him)

[Edited on 28/4/06 by iank]


ned - 28/4/06 at 08:49 AM

seeing as its a 4 speed box i can only work out him having 24 forward gears. he'll probably only use 12 of them though. running in 3rd for normal/any high speed/motorway driving and drop it down to super close ratio for very twisty blats

Ned.


iank - 28/4/06 at 08:51 AM

quote:
Originally posted by ned
seeing as its a 4 speed box i can only work out him having 24 forward gears. he'll probably only use 12 of them though. running in 3rd for normal/any high speed/motorway driving and drop it down to super close ratio for very twisty blats

Ned.


Heh heh, just showing my ignorence of T9 being 4 speed.


ned - 28/4/06 at 08:54 AM

no, you're not ignorant - just wrong

its not a type 9 but a 4 speed predecessor which shares the same casing but has a different (shorter) tailing housing. prob out of an early escort or cortina or similar.

Ned.

ps think its a type e:
https://www.burtonpower.com/technical/tt_typeE.html
or a type 2, can't remember whether it was removable or whether he cut the bellhousing off:
https://www.burtonpower.com/technical/tt_type2.html

[Edited on 28/4/06 by ned]


iank - 28/4/06 at 10:17 AM

quote:
Originally posted by ned
no, you're not ignorant - just wrong

its not a type 9 but a 4 speed predecessor which shares the same casing but has a different (shorter) tailing housing. prob out of an early escort or cortina or similar.

Ned.

ps think its a type e:
https://www.burtonpower.com/technical/tt_typeE.html
or a type 2, can't remember whether it was removable or whether he cut the bellhousing off:
https://www.burtonpower.com/technical/tt_type2.html

[Edited on 28/4/06 by ned]



Ahhahahaha, the first post said T9, that explains everything Still won't be happy running the wrong way methinks.


stevebubs - 28/4/06 at 11:35 AM

quote:
Originally posted by ned
Stephen,

I agree - he spent several hundred on uprated bits for the engine from extreme engines iirc. the reverse box with a drop gear was about £12-1500 i think he said.

He bought the car which was an ex-crossflow car without the engine and bought a bike from a salvage place so hes only spent about 6k on it afaik. he's only doing it as a winter project for a bit of fun. its already registered so will only need an mot - no sva to worry about.

he's openly said that he doesn't know how long the box''ll last running backwards he'll just wait and find out!


What gets me is there doesn't seem to be anything (with the exception of locating the gear level somewhere sensible) preventing him from running it the "right way", though...

[Edited on 28/4/06 by stevebubs]


ned - 28/4/06 at 12:08 PM

quote:
Originally posted by stevebubs
quote:

What gets me is there doesn't seem to be anything (with the exception of locating the gear level somewhere sensible) preventing him from running it the "right way", though...


Its the step down in gearing that he want which is why he's running it backwards when running it in third gear.


stevebubs - 28/4/06 at 12:21 PM

OK...so surely easier to stick a T9 in the right way round, and use 5th?

[Edited on 28/4/06 by stevebubs]


gazza285 - 28/4/06 at 12:28 PM

If he runs it that way round 3rd will be a step up gear, also reverse will be a very high gear as one turn of the output end will be (what is the ratio?) about three at the input. If you can slip the clutch enough it should do about 300mph backwards. A rethink is needed here.


ned - 28/4/06 at 12:33 PM

he just used the 4 speed box as that's what he had lying about.

don't know too much about the gearing but I have seen the car move forwards and backwards under its own steam and didn't need massive amounts of clutch slip as far as i could tell.

Ned.


gazza285 - 28/4/06 at 12:37 PM

Think about it, reverse is what, about 3:1. As in three turns of the input is one out of the back. Reverse the box and one turn of the output is three at the input. The prop at the back is now doing three times the speed of the prop at the engine.


Peteff - 28/4/06 at 12:39 PM

That was my grasp of it as well if he runs it backwards. It took my brain a while to come round to it though.


ned - 28/4/06 at 01:01 PM

Well it works as he's worked it all out and it has been driven a short distance so can't be that far out.

he would have used it the right way round in 5th but as its only a 4 speed box turned it round and is using it in 3rd which gives a similar effect. 5th would be 1:0.87 and 3rd is around 1:1.2 or 1.3which inverted is 0.76 or 0.83 which lowers the ratio to the rear axle.

Ned.

[Edited on 28/4/06 by ned]


Liam - 28/4/06 at 01:24 PM

Ratios should work out fine, although reverse should be good for at least 100mph . Good job the busa's torquey. The gearbox wont be oversped thanks to the bikes primary reduction - will just be interesting how long it takes the busa to tear it to bits running it backwards at 180bhp!!

A five speed the correct way round would be a much better idea, and would give a sensible reverse with the bike engine in 4th or so. Still, a reverse box would be even better, and if he can afford the busa in the first place...

Liam


gazza285 - 28/4/06 at 01:46 PM

quote:
Originally posted by ned
which lowers the ratio to the rear axle.




It highers the ratio to the rear axle if the box is reversed.


James - 28/4/06 at 01:59 PM

Surely must be lighter, easier (maybe cheaper) to rig up a starter motor to drive it backwards?

Ah well, good to see the spirit of innovation is still there!

Cheers,
James


ned - 28/4/06 at 09:20 PM

well i can say first hand that it works. a quick blat down the road with no tunnel cover, bonnet or seats or belts and it is dangerously fast. I think the tyres need up sizing from teh 185's that it had with the crossflow but it wheelspan in every gear we could find and it was a job for my mate to keep it in a straight line. well inpressed