RadioHowie
I Miss Beemerdons!
Coming home from the office, I'm stuck in a massive highway-repair traffic jam. Cars are lined up literally for miles and my nearest "out" is about 3/4 of a mile away. My mind starts to wander on a variety of life/home/work related topics while counting how many minutes between fan-cycles, when a pirate pulls up next to me, rev-tuning the **** out of his Ukrainian Ditch Pump. It got me to thinking....after "what way can I murder this guy and not get caught" came this thought....."what determines a motor's MAX rpm?"
There are SO many things going on in an four-cycle motor -- induction, compression, ignition, exhaust, piston speed, crankshaft strength, valve-train weight, etc., etc., etc. -- that it made me wonder.
If Yamondasuzusaki was designing a motor for their brand-new "NutRoaster 6000", is the rev limit determined by the design of the motor?...the materials of the moving parts?...the amount of air/fuel that can be shoved in?...just what the hell is it? Is the horsepower goal designed in to a new motor, or does a company pick a displacement, divide by 4, build the thing then run it to destruction to determine the rev limit? Or is the rev limit built in to the design?
Why is the FJR rev-limited to 9k rpm while my ZRX is rev-limited to 11k? And some 6 cylinder Honda 125cc two-stroke from the 60s had something like a 25,000 rpm rev-limit. Why does the V-8 in a Ford Explorer have a rev limit of 4k while the same basic motor in a Mustang Cobra has an 8k rev limit?
I thought I'd ask in the appropriate forum, and some of you techie-types might answer with a reasonable amount of explanation.
There are SO many things going on in an four-cycle motor -- induction, compression, ignition, exhaust, piston speed, crankshaft strength, valve-train weight, etc., etc., etc. -- that it made me wonder.
If Yamondasuzusaki was designing a motor for their brand-new "NutRoaster 6000", is the rev limit determined by the design of the motor?...the materials of the moving parts?...the amount of air/fuel that can be shoved in?...just what the hell is it? Is the horsepower goal designed in to a new motor, or does a company pick a displacement, divide by 4, build the thing then run it to destruction to determine the rev limit? Or is the rev limit built in to the design?
Why is the FJR rev-limited to 9k rpm while my ZRX is rev-limited to 11k? And some 6 cylinder Honda 125cc two-stroke from the 60s had something like a 25,000 rpm rev-limit. Why does the V-8 in a Ford Explorer have a rev limit of 4k while the same basic motor in a Mustang Cobra has an 8k rev limit?
I thought I'd ask in the appropriate forum, and some of you techie-types might answer with a reasonable amount of explanation.