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20 hours ago, Tosh1218 said:

I'm not mechanically minded so hope this isn't a daft question to some of you .

On today's  modern. GM engines there is a colured tab   Black,green ,red etc  what does this signify if anything ? 

Thanks in advance

Usually just used by the rider to more easily identify between the different engines he owns.

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On 12/1/2018 at 10:14 AM, foamfence said:

It actually denotes what stage the servicing is at, some engine builders change different parts at different services and that is a way of keeping track.

Green- Just been serviced, Black- Needs an Oil Change, Red- About to blow up.

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On ‎12‎/‎2‎/‎2018 at 2:01 PM, Oafski said:

Green- Just been serviced, Black- Needs an Oil Change, Red- About to blow up.

Green = blew to bits :blink:

I've never noticed mechanics changing the valve cover off and changing the colours every 3 -5 races after a change of oil :wink:

Edited by Bald Bloke
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19 hours ago, IronScorpion said:

I thought it denotes the type of engine tune it has had.

Oil is changed every 2-3 heats or should be according to PJR tuning.

Ours (now sold) had a proprietary cover with 'Ashtec Eng.' on it. When it got too shabby, I bought a black plastic one to replace it when the engine was rebuilt (black mainly because I thought is looked more flash!).

We changed the oil after every meeting, but this was in amateur/MDL level.

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On 12/2/2018 at 3:35 PM, IronScorpion said:

I thought it denotes the type of engine tune it has had.

Oil is changed every 2-3 heats or should be according to PJR tuning.

If that’s the case then no wonder the cost of racing is out of control!

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Continuing with engines, could someone please explain what the term 'off-set engine or crank' means again please.  I had a link to a website which listed many such interesting technical details but don't seem to be able to find it.   Thanks in advance....

Edited by martinmauger
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8 minutes ago, martinmauger said:

Continuing with engines, could someone please explain what the term 'off-set engine or crank' means again pease.  I had a link to a website which listed many such interesting technical details but don't seem to be able to find it.   Thanks in advance....

https://www.rideapart.com/articles/256853/free-power-offset-cylinders-explained/

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There is not a lot new in the world, this was being done many years ago particularly in scooters, but rather than having offset cranks, they were doing it simpler by having the gugeon pin off centre ( de-saxe) to minimise the side thrust of the piston, just had to be careful that you fitted the piston in the correct way round

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6 hours ago, piston197 said:

There is not a lot new in the world, this was being done many years ago particularly in scooters, but rather than having offset cranks, they were doing it simpler by having the gugeon pin off centre ( de-saxe) to minimise the side thrust of the piston, just had to be careful that you fitted the piston in the correct way round

Never down that but managed to fit a throttle slide the wrong way round once, though it wasn't on a speedway bike.  One never fogets the terror of a throttle stuck wide open :o.  Then one gives much praise and thanks for the invention and fitting of the kill switch ;)....

Edited by martinmauger
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On 12/6/2018 at 11:22 AM, GWC said:

If that’s the case then no wonder the cost of racing is out of control!

warm up and 4 heats = 850 ml of new oil . about £10 . rebuild every 30 races ,£400

 

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2 hours ago, adonis said:

warm up and 4 heats = 850 ml of new oil . about £10 . rebuild every 30 races ,£400

 

I guess your looking at about £30 per race when you add fuel,oil, service cost and a rear tyre. I don't know how long things like both chains and clutch plates last either.

Edited by Bald Bloke
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22 minutes ago, Bald Bloke said:

I guess your looking at about £30 per race when you add fuel,oil, service cost and a rear tyre. I don't know how long things like both chains and clutch plates last either.

some elite league riders bin the clutch plates after every meeting , others keep them for 4 or 5 ,  8 plates at £40 each ,  front chains  last for about 10 meetings unless you want to risk your neck and have one break then you can push them further , About £40  for a primary chain . back ones last about the same and cost the same , if you want to maintain reliable kit  speedway is a money pit  with no bottom , dont forget the chainsprays and  filter sprays , clutch bodies at £500 dont last a full season either

 

 

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On ‎12‎/‎10‎/‎2018 at 1:12 PM, adonis said:

some elite league riders bin the clutch plates after every meeting , others keep them for 4 or 5 ,  8 plates at £40 each ,  front chains  last for about 10 meetings unless you want to risk your neck and have one break then you can push them further , About £40  for a primary chain . back ones last about the same and cost the same , if you want to maintain reliable kit  speedway is a money pit  with no bottom , dont forget the chainsprays and  filter sprays , clutch bodies at £500 dont last a full season either

 

 

Thanks for that :t:

Edit.. I had a look at Andy Smith's shop.Prices ain't bad really. NEB clutch plates are £9.50 each, NEB Elite clutch drums are £145. Interesting to look at :t:

http://www.frp-uk.com

 

Edited by Bald Bloke
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