I am not really sure at this point of what I will do. For this year, I do not have much more time to play. Riding season is soon here and I will be away for a month so further experiment will continue next year. As we stand, there are a few options, one would be to open the airbox more but I do not think it would change the fact that there is a whole in the range.
As you see here, the trade is off is power on top or power in the middle. I will change the jets for power in the middle. By middle I mean from 3500 to 7500 RPM.
The solid line is 38 pilot jet, 138-134-138 main jet, 1/2 shim under the needle, stock Trophy air box.
The dotted line is 38 pilot jet, 128-128-128 main jet, no shims and stock Trophy air box.
Here is the mixture graph, the lines are matching the previous one.
As one can see, is has more horse power on top but loosing some in the middle and it does get quite rich from 4700 to 6500 RPM. I will rejet but I am not sure at the moment what jet I will use. I am trying to do fancy calculation to get there. Chances are I will use 134-130-134 and keep the shims.
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Overall how is the feel of it as far as acceleration compared to stock?
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It is stronger than stock, at this point I have 10 more horse power and 7 more pounds of torque. It is very hard to compare since I did not use the bike for winter and on teh first ride I have a different set up but I can guarantee you that a stock one is lost besides.
The price of 10 horse power and 7 pounds of torque.
I am calculating in Canadian $ and will translate at the end. Cams 400 $
Air box 100 $
Jets 15 $
Dyno run 225 $
Various gaskets, 25 $
Total, 765 $ or at today's rate 620 $
Fun of doing it, feeling more power on the bike, loosing a sport 600 at the exit of a slow curve, priceless.
Say 310 $ for horses and 310 $ for cows (torque) or 31 $ per horse and cows come at 44 $ a piece.
[ This message was edited by: Saigon5 on 2005-04-23 06:07 ]