Why do bike motors make so much more power?

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cuttinties

cuttinties

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Don't forget the muffler design - the design of chainsaw mufflers likely is the most limiting factor. It is limited how much a larger carb and more transfer capasity helps, with chainsaw style box mufflers.

Even with a tuned pipe there's only so much room in a piston ported,short stroke crank case
 
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Nitroman

Nitroman

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Bingo!

Too bad most of you guys a real young and don't mess with snowmachines, then you'd have a good idea of what is going on. Some here do, some don't.

I remember Startingline Products, back when they made a big name for themselves taking the Polaris Indy 650 engine, a piston ported, 3-into-one pipe engine making about 90 horsepower, and welding manifolds on the case for reeds, and building individual pipes to take it up to 130 horsepower at over 10k rpm. After Polaris started making the case reed motors, the 580 XLT would only make around 100 hp with the 3-into-one pipe. SLP's pipes and tuning recommendations would get you 145 hp.
Even with the saw motors choked down, you have to have a carb to get air in, and the supercharger (the pipe), to help it out. There is only so much you could do with the design, but a bigger carb and pipe would be the biggest bang for the buck. But could you imagine Mikuni flatslides and big-assed curly pipes and big gastanks on a saw? Kewl to run for a little while, but all day?

If you really want to wring out all the changes that can be had to a motor, you need a way to measure the changes. Like the following:
Dynamometer_Two.jpg

And
Dynamometer.jpg

Both those little monsters (35cc), are making around 12hp at 18k rpm. But you need a set-up to carefully and accurately measure subtle changes like the length and diameter of the stinger on your pipe.
Have fun.
 
cuttinties

cuttinties

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Boost ports, auxiliary exhaust ports, primary and secondary transfers paired with case volume, full circle cranks and carburetors that are capable of keeping up there's very little you can't do.
 
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Boost ports, auxiliary exhaust ports, primary and secondary transfers paired with case volume, full circle cranks and carburetors that are capable of keeping up there's very little you can't do.

The stroke also tends to be longer as well. For the same RPM as a saw, you get more piston speed and more potential flow/port timing.
 
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