bikerphil wrote:Thanks for the picture dude, what would be useful is if you can place a steel rule in the shot so i can get an idea of the sizes of things.
The only difference between the journals looks to be the size of the oil feed holes, restricted in one side and opened out in the other, is that right?
In which case it might be a matter of drilling them larger on the other side and inserting restrictors in the original side.
I then need to figure out what scope there is for getting more power from the engine, theres no point in using it unless each motor cam be made to produce 150hp NA and strong enough to take another 100hp of nitrous. 400 would net low 7 second times or even 6's if weight can be kept down.
AndI'm still chasing 10's
The oil feed drillings in the cases would also need to be man enough to feed the newly-enlarged journal, no idea it you can get to those, but probably. Depends if the crankcase uppers are cast as a single unit or several sections machined and then connected together as to whether you still have access to those oilways.
The weakness on these engines and the usual bar to developing high HP/torque is the fact that the swingarm pivots off the back of the cases, without bracing and lots of work the back of the gearbox snaps off due to fatigue.
That's not a problem with what you're planning.
But you can't use high comp pistons as an easy power-up, if you plan Nitrous, so head work, cams, exhaust and big carbs would be the way to go.
For the use you have in mind you can dispense with trying to make it tick over, or pull away from traffic lights cleanly, etc etc and so the tuning can be much more focussed.
I have an idea to improve exhaust gasflowing by chopping a section of the heads out and re-welding, so that the ports exit more cleanly into an oval collector/header before they go into the downpipe.
Looking at the Storm versus SP1 porting designs, this seems to be where a fair bit of the power difference has gone.
Sadly, by the way, you can't use SP1 cams, different diameter, and you can't transplant SP1 heads on either, so maybe starting with two SP1 bottom ends would be better, but a lot more expensive...
Bottom end should be fine, but welding crank pins might be a sensible precaution- if you get a problem it will likely kill both cranks if they're linked as you propose.
It's not falling off, it's an upgrade opportunity.