When will there be an 1/8th scale 4 stroke Motor????
#92
Tech Regular
Joined: Sep 2008
Posts: 294
From: Brisbane QLD Australia
[QUOTE=Storydude1;7898259][QUOTE=Smokeyr67;7898170]
I didn't care about smearing her, it's just that she had a habit of sitting bolt upright in the middle of a bend! Gotta say, that for some strange reason she did prefer riding on the back of the 2 stroke....
That was the joy of the RZ. You never felt safe on it.
In the back of your mind, you knew all 65HP would come on in like .000002 seconds, regardless of your position, attitude, or where in the corner you were.
I miss old 2 stroke street bikes. And finding one here in the States that's not a mangled heap, or a showpiece is a difficult task.
LMAO. Great city and canyon bikes...horrible for any long distance.
I only rode the RZ single. Couldn't bear the fact of smearing my GF as well....

In the back of your mind, you knew all 65HP would come on in like .000002 seconds, regardless of your position, attitude, or where in the corner you were.

I miss old 2 stroke street bikes. And finding one here in the States that's not a mangled heap, or a showpiece is a difficult task.
LMAO. Great city and canyon bikes...horrible for any long distance.
I only rode the RZ single. Couldn't bear the fact of smearing my GF as well....
#93
Tech Adept
Joined: Mar 2010
Posts: 181
From: FL
Just for a talking point, here's a (several year old) dyno comparison between 2-stroke and 4-stroke motocross race bikes. Today's chart would look similar, just the numbers would be bigger. The top group of lines are the 4-strokes.
2-stroke vs 4-stroke MX dyno image
Note the 4-strokes are larger displacement, yet they rev higher than the smaller 2-strokes. If you've ever ridden motocross bikes what you'll notice is the 2-strokes build rpm faster, but the 4-strokes have significantly better traction and hookup and the result is the 4-strokes are indeed much faster on the track. Acceleration through and out of corners is much better, jumps with little or no run-up are much easier, you can go faster on slippery tracks, etc.. I would think the benefit to an RC car would be similar. The catch is displacement; it takes a little more displacement for a 4-stroke to get similar horsepower to a 2-stroke, but the torque curve is much smoother and the power is much more usable. At least on a race track. Are there displacement limits in RC? Would it be legal to race a .4 4-stroke against a .21 2-stroke?
#94
Tech Adept
Joined: Mar 2010
Posts: 181
From: FL
This is not correct. The (very old) rules of MX racing allowed 450cc 4-strokes to race with 250cc 2-strokes, but back in the day before 4-strokes were developed 2-strokes had such a weight advantage that 4-strokes were not competitive. FF several years, 4-strokes developed and got much more powerful and much lighter, not to mention made better power, and (in 1998 I believe..) Yamaha entered the series with the first hand-made YZ400 4-stroke and promptly won the championship. Horsepower wars drove the engines up to the 450cc limit allowed by the race series (read: marketing) and now the 4-strokes make so much power that the 2-strokes of the allowed displacement don't have a chance. I've ridden both, and 4-strokes are soooo much more fun to ride! I'm never going back 2-stroke. It would be really cool to see similar development for RC, but I don't know if there's enough cash to make it happen?
#95
Tech Adept
iTrader: (3)
Joined: Jul 2009
Posts: 232
From: Florida
Search Youtube for "losi 4 stroke" should be the first 2 videos that come up. There of my 4 stroke converted Losi 8T.. Still in the testing stage, running a $80.00 .52 converted plane engine
Tell you one thing, these 4 strokes will burn a clutch up in a few days! If i could get the power to the ground, id switch to racing only 4 stroke. Im also getting 12:30 to a tank, and gas is cheaper
Tell you one thing, these 4 strokes will burn a clutch up in a few days! If i could get the power to the ground, id switch to racing only 4 stroke. Im also getting 12:30 to a tank, and gas is cheaper
#96
Well, here's my 2 cents.
Of course, I will accept change back.
4 strokes (Motocross wise) have dominated the scene.
So, with that in mind, it can be done and has been done for some time.
Also, Just because the video looked like it was hard to disassemble 4 stroke
doesn't mean by this evening, a true R/Cer would not know how to have that
thing taken apart and put back together blind folded. I know, If it were mine
I would by tonight..

Also, RPM is a problem now, but, after some time, someone would work to
resolve this by gearing or a better built engine.
And as for Rotary engines, I'm all for that as well. They like RPM. (Althought
I don't think they have much on the bottom for power)
20 minutes of run time is definitely something I would be interested in.
I would also wonder if it would last longer between rebuilds.
Give me the plans, I'll mill it up..



RotaryNut Maico 490 or 500. What a real mans bike.
Image that engine updated in a new frame bike.
Wooo Mama...
Of course, I will accept change back.
4 strokes (Motocross wise) have dominated the scene.
So, with that in mind, it can be done and has been done for some time.
Also, Just because the video looked like it was hard to disassemble 4 stroke
doesn't mean by this evening, a true R/Cer would not know how to have that
thing taken apart and put back together blind folded. I know, If it were mine
I would by tonight..


Also, RPM is a problem now, but, after some time, someone would work to
resolve this by gearing or a better built engine.
And as for Rotary engines, I'm all for that as well. They like RPM. (Althought
I don't think they have much on the bottom for power)
20 minutes of run time is definitely something I would be interested in.
I would also wonder if it would last longer between rebuilds.
Give me the plans, I'll mill it up..




RotaryNut Maico 490 or 500. What a real mans bike.
Image that engine updated in a new frame bike.
Wooo Mama...
Last edited by Dr. Evil; 09-10-2010 at 03:39 PM.
#98
Well, here's my 2 cents.
Of course, I will accept change back.
4 strokes (Motocross wise) have dominated the scene.
So, with that in mind, it can be done and has been done for some time.
Also, Just because the video looked like it was hard to disassemble 4 stroke
doesn't mean by this evening, a true R/Cer would not know how to have that
thing taken apart and put back together blind folded. I know, If it were mine
I would by tonight..

Also, RPM is a problem now, but, after some time, someone would work to
resolve this by gearing or a better built engine.
And as for Rotary engines, I'm all for that as well. They like RPM. (Althought
I don't think they have much on the bottom for power)
20 minutes of run time is definitely something I would be interested in.
I would also wonder if it would last longer between rebuilds.
Give me the plans, I'll mill it up..



RotaryNut Maico 490 or 500. What a real mans bike.
Image that engine updated in a new frame bike.
Wooo Mama...
Of course, I will accept change back.
4 strokes (Motocross wise) have dominated the scene.
So, with that in mind, it can be done and has been done for some time.
Also, Just because the video looked like it was hard to disassemble 4 stroke
doesn't mean by this evening, a true R/Cer would not know how to have that
thing taken apart and put back together blind folded. I know, If it were mine
I would by tonight..


Also, RPM is a problem now, but, after some time, someone would work to
resolve this by gearing or a better built engine.
And as for Rotary engines, I'm all for that as well. They like RPM. (Althought
I don't think they have much on the bottom for power)
20 minutes of run time is definitely something I would be interested in.
I would also wonder if it would last longer between rebuilds.
Give me the plans, I'll mill it up..




RotaryNut Maico 490 or 500. What a real mans bike.
Image that engine updated in a new frame bike.
Wooo Mama...
http://www.maicointernational.com/html/mx-2010.html
#99
.. wrong..........four strokes need nothing but a straight pipe.......no expansion chamber needed...so there is a 100.00 item off your car/truck......
#100
Well, some one mention they don't spin up as high.
Hmm. Tell that to Honda. Where does the CRF-450 spin up to??
The airplane engines are pushrod engines at that.
No overhead cam like the motocross bikes.
Less parts should equal higher revs not to mention possibly longer life??
Maybe that part is a matter of a better built part.
Someone should consider turning this industry on it ear with this project.
Hmm. Tell that to Honda. Where does the CRF-450 spin up to??
The airplane engines are pushrod engines at that.
No overhead cam like the motocross bikes.
Less parts should equal higher revs not to mention possibly longer life??
Maybe that part is a matter of a better built part.
Someone should consider turning this industry on it ear with this project.
#103
I've been flying planes with 4-strokes for a while now. Some additional benefits that have been overlooked are the fact that they are SUPER easy to tune and that once they are set, your rarely play with the needles. I've had my Saito for ~8 gallons now, reset the valve lash once, and beyond that have done nothing. I haven't even begun to think about a rebuild.
#104
Suspended
iTrader: (6)
Joined: Oct 2009
Posts: 315
You have to take into account the motor that losi is running is a bone stock air plane motor...no where near intended for off road...could you imagine a four stoke motor made for the off road market....it would make 2 stroke a thing of the past...i am all for it!!


