When Suzuki made the Madura, they developed a hydraulic lifter that would rev to 9000 rpm in the 1200s and 10,500 rpm in the 700s. I've hit the rev limiter on mine on more than one occasion and never had a problem in 74,000+ miles.
Thanks for the link. From there they confirm my understanding that there's a rev limitation inherent in hydraulic lifters that deals with mass and the flow of fluid into and out of the lifter in the shortened times of higher RPM motors. There are designs that can be had (all it takes is money, right?) but even those are RPM limited.The rev limit for a typical set of stock hydraulic lifters is usually around 6,200 to 6,500 rpm. If you want to rev the engine higher than this, you either need solid lifters or modified performance lifters that can safely handle higher rpms without pumping up or collapsing. https://www.enginebuildermag.com/2012/01/hydraulic-camshafts-and-lifters-101/
Hydraulic lifters that have an “anti-pump up” design are made with tighter internal clearances and/or special valving to reduce bleed down. Anti-pump up lifters allow higher engine speeds and are a good choice for a dual-purpose street/strip engine. One supplier of such lifters says their anti-pump up lifters can handle engine speeds up to 7,500 rpm with no valve float, and can even be used with many camshafts that are designed for solid lifters.
Doing the gen 3 now and don't see how it is any easier. IMHO Different yes but easier no. You have far more experience with these than I do. unk:The answer Ray is GEN III...eazy peazy to get the valve cover off/on!
~G
Not that bad..... checking, maybe..... adjusting, no.Shim under bucket systems are as reliable as a hammer. Hydraulic valves do collapse. I'm sure someone will pipe up about their gazillion mile something or other that never had valve problems but the truth is, hydraulic lifters do go bad and do suffer valve float. Checking valves on the FJR is a Saturday afternoon project. It's just not that bad.
Did you get the coil replaced?Finally watched the video so I'll quit whining for now and go back to the current project which is building a vintage flat head six for a 1955 Chris Craft boat. No way can the valves hit the pistons on a flat head.
After that it's fixing the kick start on a 59 Pan Head Harley.
I like simple cause I got a simple mind. unk:
Ya finally got one that works. Aftermarket Chinese junk but it makes spark for now. The old dog runs so now waiting for my buddy Leon to come test ride it. I'm not riding a foot clutch hand shift on the road.. I'm dangerous enough as it is.Did you get the coil replaced?
Thanks, all the excuse I need.Finally watched the video so I'll quit whining for now and go back to the current project which is building a vintage flat head six for a 1955 Chris Craft boat. No way can the valves hit the pistons on a flat head.
After that it's fixing the kick start on a 59 Pan Head Harley.
I like simple cause I got a simple mind. unk:
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