Toecutter
What would DoG do?
until I talked to the local service manger today, who was at the Vegas trade show this weekend, and even got a picture taken with V. Rossi.
He said the new R1 sounds more like a Ducati than a Yamaha, because of its revolutionary crank design, Crossplane. The torque bursts supposedly hit differently on the crank, enabling the rear tire to recover and reshape evenly through the turn, theoretically allowing more power to be smoothly applied to the ground, or some such techie stuff....
1400 c.c. Gen III Crossplane FJR anyone? (if'n we can't get the V-Max motor)
From the website:
He said the new R1 sounds more like a Ducati than a Yamaha, because of its revolutionary crank design, Crossplane. The torque bursts supposedly hit differently on the crank, enabling the rear tire to recover and reshape evenly through the turn, theoretically allowing more power to be smoothly applied to the ground, or some such techie stuff....
1400 c.c. Gen III Crossplane FJR anyone? (if'n we can't get the V-Max motor)
From the website:
Introducing the 2009 YZF-R1, the first ever production motorcycle with a crossplane crankshaft. Crossplane technology, first pioneered in MotoGP racing with the M1, puts each connecting rod 90° from the next, with an uneven firing interval of 270°- 180°- 90°- 180°. This all but eliminates undesirable inertial crankshaft torque, which allows the engine’s compression torque to build smoothly and provide a very linear power delivery out of the corners. It’s a feeling that’s simply unmatched, like having two engines in one: the low-rpm torquey feel of a twin with the raw, high-rpm power of an inline 4. In fact, the new YZF-R1 is not a continuation of existing supersport development; it is breakthrough technology that represents a paradigm shift in both technology and performance.