View Full Version : Test your two stroke knowledge
Keith Salyer
04-01-2015, 09:22 AM
How many of you two stroke guru's know what this little item is? Manbearpig and 42Isles excluded from this trivia question.213450
redsox
04-01-2015, 09:27 AM
im a two stroke moron, not a two stroke guru. its a flow restrictor from the exhaust of something, i'd guess.
nd4speed
04-01-2015, 10:23 AM
It's a Chevrolet canooter valve.
TecateDan
04-01-2015, 10:35 AM
I'm going with a base plate spacer for a stroked crankshaft
Keith Salyer
04-01-2015, 10:42 AM
Oh Tecate Dan you mighty warm. Hard to tell by the pic but it is not flat. It has some curve (concave) to it.213451
3 Wheel Drive
04-01-2015, 10:51 AM
Every 2 stroke mechanic needs one of those to calibrate their machine properly - a beer bottle opener! Duh...:beer
bansheekx
04-01-2015, 11:04 AM
It's a crank case stuffer to reduce the crank case volume.
Billy Golightly
04-01-2015, 11:14 AM
It does look like a stuffer but its not very thick...Something to do with turbulence or something from the crank perhaps? The rod fits through the slot.
ironchop
04-01-2015, 11:51 AM
its like an oil shield goes between cylinder base and engine lower to direct oil from cylinder walls down into the valley to direct it toward the crank pin (if you flip it over so the concave side is up)?????
That's my very best guess
my second guess is it`s something for a Chevrolet like nd4spd said....maybe a really crappy homemade grill badge lol
atc300r
04-01-2015, 12:35 PM
Its a crank case stuffer it helps increase crankcase pressure on the down stroke of the piston to increase the charge threw the transfer ports.There was a snowmobile company back in the 60-70s that had a system like this but was part of the crank case.
Keith Salyer
04-01-2015, 03:07 PM
Wow, I'm impressed you guys. Calvin at Cammex put these stuffer plates in all the 81-84 airfoolers . These motors did not have full circle cranks so this plate helped fill that void but if I remember right it also directed the flow through the transfer ports more efficiently. It is made out of thin alum plate and I used to help Calvin build them for the motors. I don't remember if we sold them to the public or if it was for the team trikes only. Mine had them, Kirby Stanislaus ran them, Mike Park, Jay Spradling, Jimbo Eubanks and Robby Owl all had them. I don't know if Glen Isles had an air fooler at the time.
atc300r
04-01-2015, 03:16 PM
I read an article about Rob Selvy welding pieces onto the 81-84 250r crank and then machines it into a full circle crank and destrokes it for the liquid R 200 kit.There also used to be a company that made a full circle crank for the air-fooler.Is this piece a bolt in deal or is there some machining to do . Id like to try one of these in one of my air-foolers.
Billy Golightly
04-01-2015, 03:37 PM
Keith I had a bit of an unfair advantage...I've had this (And a few other) pictures saved from some posts and comments Calvin had made at www.planetsand.com probably 10 years ago. I knew it looked familiar, just wasn't sure about the thickness of it really working that much as a stuffer moreso than a deflector of the sorts.
213460
(This was posted by Calvin as a precursor and something he worked on during the development of the 500cc Sabre 250r engines)
Keith Salyer
04-01-2015, 05:53 PM
He made a lot of cool stuff in the three years I worked/rode for him.
onformula1
04-01-2015, 11:44 PM
How many of you two stroke guru's know what this little item is? Manbearpig and 42Isles excluded from this trivia question.213450
Thank goodness, I knew what is was.
Next time you may want to rename the picture. :lol:
I miss- Calvin
Keith Salyer
04-03-2015, 11:55 AM
Billy that spacer looks like it is cast out of the plastic mold material.
Billy Golightly
04-03-2015, 12:01 PM
Yes. I believe from memory, that was a pattern piece for a casted part of that in his foundry that was past of the Sabre 500 kits.
onformula1
04-04-2015, 09:12 PM
Besides Billy did anyone here read his work on plantsand? He was on there a lot at one point he talked about crank stuffing in a very long thread.
TrikeGarage
07-29-2015, 05:25 PM
Can someone explain how this go's. Into a crankcase for me. Thanks.how many cc of crank case volume is lost by adding this peice.
barnett468
07-29-2015, 06:14 PM
.
.
Looks like atc300r wins the steak knives, good job.
Can someone explain how this go's. Into a crankcase for me. Thanks.how many cc of crank case volume is lost by adding this peice.
That’s an easy one . . Looks like it rested on the step in the cases that is around 1 inch below the top . . Looks like the two tabs went toward the front to keep the plate from rotating in the cylinder . . The base of the cylinder would have kept it from lifting . . The cyl base may have had to be machined slightly to do this . . Looks like the convex portion would face up to clear the crank.
http://www.3wheelerworld.com/attachment.php?attachmentid=213451&d=1427899374
.......................http://www.3wheelerworld.com/attachment.php?attachmentid=213450&d=1427894542
http://i.ebayimg.com/00/s/MTE5NVgxNjAw/z/5pwAAOSwNSxU61HX/$_57.JPG
barnett468
07-29-2015, 07:28 PM
.
how many cc of crank case volume is lost by adding this peice.
I had to guestimate at the approximate size, which is pretty easy to do, then guestimate what it would be as a rectangle instead of the square, then subtract the open area in the center from the estimated overall width, then add the thickness.
This is what I used
a. 3.5" long minus 1/4" to estimate it being square = 3.0".
b. Width of each side .75" x 2 = 1.5"
c. .060" thick but it's more likely at least .080"
The volume is:
0.0000044245 cubic meters
4.4245 cubic centimeters
0.000005787 cubic yards
0.00015625 cubic feet
0.27 cubic inches
0.0011688 U.S. gallons
0.0044245 liters
.
Powered by vBulletin® Version 4.2.2 Copyright © 2024 vBulletin Solutions, Inc. All rights reserved.