There's a reason these GS engines go for so many miles... I don't see a plain bearing crank going for that many miles but maybe I'm wrong![]()
My 210,000 mile Toyota would like a word with you about the reliability of plain bearings...
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There's a reason these GS engines go for so many miles... I don't see a plain bearing crank going for that many miles but maybe I'm wrong![]()
The theory behind using roller crank bearings (as it was explained to me years ago by a wise old man), is that they are better at handling uneven loads. The longevity of the crank bearings are mostly dependent on cylinder health and crank balance. If the cylinder tolerances are out of spec, or the crank is poorly balanced, it causes vibration, which as we all know will kill the crank bearings quick. Roller bearings are SUPPOSED to be better at combating this. Suzuki, in their desperate and futile chase of Honda, used roller bearings in hopes that they could speed production, which was expected to result in poorer manufacturing tolerances.
In short, the reason they used roller bearings is because they were trying to "cheap" on the rest of the engine manufacturing. Basically an expensive solution to a problem that really didn't exist. Typical of engineers.
The GS engines were Suzuki?s first four-cycle engines; prior to that they built two strokes, which naturally required roller bearing cranks. Of course this is speculation on my part but I think Suzuki choose the roller crank to speed development of the engines since they were familiar with the technology. The top end borrowed heavily from the Kawasaki DOHC design and the roller crank also provided some separation from possible allegations of outright design plagiarism.
The business about roller cranks being more fault tolerant of poor machining tolerances is an interesting theory but doesn?t sound right to me since rolling element bearings are very unforgiving to misalignment. Rolling element bearings have a grading system which specifies how much internal clearance a bearing can have and Suzuki would have to use some pretty loose bearings if they wanted to take advantage of any cost savings brought on by loose tolerancing. And if Suzuki wanted to save money on machine work tolerances they certainly wouldn?t have chosen a multi piece crank, with all the tolerance stack up concerns this brings into play. The fact that GS engines are so durable also flys in the face of any claims that Suzuki fit together the engines with sloppy tolerances. Interesting theory, but just doesn?t seem right.
Uhhhmm...Ed, The early Z1 and KZ motor might as well be in our GSes. There is nearly NOTHING that isnt the same, right down to the roller bearing crank.
Oops, guess you’re right.
Both Kawasaki and Suzuki were primarily two stroke engine companies so I assume that’s where the roller cranks came from.
roller bearing cranks theoretically dont have a rev limit either. plain bearings do. its just the cams and chain and such that cant handle the rotation.
I think all of the bikes with roller bearing cranks had low pressure systems, not sure about the two strokes, but I would assume so..Please explain what you mean by rev limit.
I looked up the gt 750 which was a 2 strokeand it had a 7500 RPM redline not exactly stellar but with twice the rate of impulse a two stroke would not need to rev exceedignly high to make good power.
If plain bearing shave enough oil pressure supplied they can sustain high RPMs
It is the oil that the shafts float in is it not?
I assume the oil film integrity is alos a limiting factor in roller bearing systems. Do the older bikes with roller bearing have high or low pressure oiling sytems?
does the superiority of the roller bearing bikes in terms of longevity not come formt he fact that the bearing materila itself is far more wear resistant being hardened steel as opposed to the soft babbit metal of palin bearings?
I think all of the bikes with roller bearing cranks had low pressure systems, not sure about the two strokes, but I would assume so..
Two strokes have a NO pressure oiling system. They either use premix or a total loss oil injection system.
Do the older bikes with roller bearing have high or low pressure oiling sytems??