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holty wrote:Off-set engine cones were made made to help move the inlet manifold of the ts1 barrel away from the frame as the original design was very close and would often lead to the 2 rubbing together causing bad vibrations, further tuning of the ts1 showed adding a packer plate behind the reedvalve would open up the boost port more and improve performance, but reduced clearance is also a problem and off-set cones help to give a bigger gap between inlet and frame, other cylinders with a reedvalve might have the same need for extra clearance, I'm building an engine at the moment that is crankcase induction and the inlet is very close to the bumpstop, I'm using a longer shocker and off-set cones to give the clearance I need.
The cones are of a tapered design and simply push into the frame, by hand, they do have an inclination to rotate when the bolt is pushed through so using studlock to glue them in place seems to be a good solution, the centre hole is off-set so both cones need to be fitted as a mirror image to make sure the alignment of the engine stays straight
holty wrote:Off-set engine cones were made made to help move the inlet manifold of the ts1 barrel away from the frame as the original design was very close and would often lead to the 2 rubbing together causing bad vibrations, further tuning of the ts1 showed adding a packer plate behind the reedvalve would open up the boost port more and improve performance, but reduced clearance is also a problem and off-set cones help to give a bigger gap between inlet and frame, other cylinders with a reedvalve might have the same need for extra clearance, I'm building an engine at the moment that is crankcase induction and the inlet is very close to the bumpstop, I'm using a longer shocker and off-set cones to give the clearance I need.
The cones are of a tapered design and simply push into the frame, by hand, they do have an inclination to rotate when the bolt is pushed through so using studlock to glue them in place seems to be a good solution, the centre hole is off-set so both cones need to be fitted as a mirror image to make sure the alignment of the engine stays straight
Scooterdude wrote:holty wrote:Off-set engine cones were made made to help move the inlet manifold of the ts1 barrel away from the frame as the original design was very close and would often lead to the 2 rubbing together causing bad vibrations, further tuning of the ts1 showed adding a packer plate behind the reedvalve would open up the boost port more and improve performance, but reduced clearance is also a problem and off-set cones help to give a bigger gap between inlet and frame, other cylinders with a reedvalve might have the same need for extra clearance, I'm building an engine at the moment that is crankcase induction and the inlet is very close to the bumpstop, I'm using a longer shocker and off-set cones to give the clearance I need.
The cones are of a tapered design and simply push into the frame, by hand, they do have an inclination to rotate when the bolt is pushed through so using studlock to glue them in place seems to be a good solution, the centre hole is off-set so both cones need to be fitted as a mirror image to make sure the alignment of the engine stays straight
Probably not in most cases but maybe in yours would it not just be all that much easier to remove the engine bar tube and reposition it say 10-15 mm lower? For those that go with offset cones, once you find the right position you can weld them in place otherwise they will move over time.... just saying..
A grubscrew! What an excellent idea, yes I like it you'd have to place it opposite the split though I guess.holty wrote:Scooterdude wrote:holty wrote:Off-set engine cones were made made to help move the inlet manifold of the ts1 barrel away from the frame as the original design was very close and would often lead to the 2 rubbing together causing bad vibrations, further tuning of the ts1 showed adding a packer plate behind the reedvalve would open up the boost port more and improve performance, but reduced clearance is also a problem and off-set cones help to give a bigger gap between inlet and frame, other cylinders with a reedvalve might have the same need for extra clearance, I'm building an engine at the moment that is crankcase induction and the inlet is very close to the bumpstop, I'm using a longer shocker and off-set cones to give the clearance I need.
The cones are of a tapered design and simply push into the frame, by hand, they do have an inclination to rotate when the bolt is pushed through so using studlock to glue them in place seems to be a good solution, the centre hole is off-set so both cones need to be fitted as a mirror image to make sure the alignment of the engine stays straight
Probably not in most cases but maybe in yours would it not just be all that much easier to remove the engine bar tube and reposition it say 10-15 mm lower? For those that go with offset cones, once you find the right position you can weld them in place otherwise they will move over time.... just saying..
Yes that is something I did consider, but I don't want to alter the frame in all honesty, I have been thinking about adding a grubscrew to the cone, so I would just drill a hole in the tube and thread the grubscrew into the cone, thus making the cone unable to turn when the engine is fitted, can also use standard cones later.
Solid Air wrote:I agree, the grub screw is a great idea! Thanks
coaster wrote:Solid Air wrote:I agree, the grub screw is a great idea! Thanks
Further discussion need I think, I THINK that the assembly is supposed to work so that tightening the engine pivot nuts pulls the ferules in the mounts in and that forces the cones into the taper in the frame and at the same time causes the cones to grip the engine pivot bar. This makes it all solid with the movement for suspension travel entirely done by the flex in the mounts. This it to prevent the frame wearing I think. Not sure what effect a grub screw would have but I think it MIGHT interfere with assembly gripping the bar tight at the very least. You could use a grub screw to lock the cones once everything is nipped up tight but not before.....I think
Fast n Furious wrote:If you went around a big scooter meet with your torque wrench and offered a free engine mount nut torque test............. How many do you think would make the grade?
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