But at the 90 degree angle, it's not going to sit like an inline, almost more like a V twin. Sorta. The weight will be front to back, assuming that is the forcing mechanism behind the desire to lean. If it's just torque madness, the lean would probably be based more on how well balanced the rider stays and that the pants-crapping doesn't make the rider slide to the right or left, causing radical leaning one way or the otherI've always felt like torque wants to stand the bike straight up, but that's me and I don't spend any time at 100mph. I'm only half as crazy as Mark. Maybe not even
Other than the rider, the weight is in the engine. An I-4 has it distributed more east west, while turning 90 degrees it brings it north-south in relation to the frame. Depending on what Mark does to avoid burned legs/reduced weight from exhaust, that is. My guess would be that it will make the bike feel lighter, and be more wheelie-inducing.
MissFab...open the hood of your car and have someone rev the engine.
Watch how the motor twists over one way against the mounts.
It twists over on the line of the crank shaft.
Now put a motor in a bike with the crank inline front to back, like your car and it will do the same thing...only not on rubber mounts, so it will push the whole bike over one way....
A V-twin still has the crank 90? out from the center line of the bike...