B
BassCliff
Guest
Hi,
Forgive me if I state the obvious. My purpose here is clarity in communication.
What is your current application? Current intake and exhaust setup? Stock airbox? Pods? Velocity stacks? Headers only? 4-n-1? Stock exhaust?
Each combination will flow air differently and require a little different jet setup in your carbs. In the carb sections of my website you'll find some pretty good information and links to other pages with jetting and testing procedures.
The cool thing about the DynoJet Stage 3 kit is that it is designed for good pod filters and a decent 4-n-1 exhaust. It's basically a "plug and play" solution which takes most of the guesswork out of jetting for the "performance" intake and exhaust setup.
Octain, I tend to agree with TCK. Those don't look tapered enough to be DJ needles. But the notches at the top make tuning the midrange so much easier.
Thank you for your indulgence,
BassCliff
Forgive me if I state the obvious. My purpose here is clarity in communication.
Thats what im trying to do is JEt it correctly for my application.
I just need to tune this thing without the pods.
What is your current application? Current intake and exhaust setup? Stock airbox? Pods? Velocity stacks? Headers only? 4-n-1? Stock exhaust?
Each combination will flow air differently and require a little different jet setup in your carbs. In the carb sections of my website you'll find some pretty good information and links to other pages with jetting and testing procedures.
For example, let's say you jet for headers only and get it running perfectly. Then you put a V&H 4-n-1 on it later. The engine will not run the same because the airflow is different. You'll probably have to rejet for the (slightly) more restrictive exhaust, perhaps installing slightly smaller jets.I am also removing the restrictive muffler and running a open header.
This is not an exact science and requires a bit of black voodoo magic art. What I mean is that there will be some testing, some trial and error involved in every different combination of intake and exhaust. Even two of the same bikes with the same intakes and exhausts can require different jetting just because of the range of tolerances within the manufacturing processes of the engine, air intakes, exhausts, etc.Im trying to configure the correct jet size and A/F Mix.
The cool thing about the DynoJet Stage 3 kit is that it is designed for good pod filters and a decent 4-n-1 exhaust. It's basically a "plug and play" solution which takes most of the guesswork out of jetting for the "performance" intake and exhaust setup.
I'm sure you could manufacture some killer needles if you had the specs. I doubt that Dynojet publishes that kind of information so you'd have to get some originals to make copies. I suppose as long as you didn't sell them it wouldn't be illegal.Has anyone tried grinding their own needles? Is it the same as making a drill bit?
P.S. I am a machinist and run a full machine shop. Flight Research engineering.
Octain, I tend to agree with TCK. Those don't look tapered enough to be DJ needles. But the notches at the top make tuning the midrange so much easier.
Thank you for your indulgence,
BassCliff
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