Why Turbo Ruins Motorcycles

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  • čas přidán 25. 07. 2024
  • Why is nobody making turbo bikes, you may be asking. There are several reasons which play a significant role in why it is not a good idea. Some companies gave it a try and found out how tricky it is to sort it out. Making a good turbocharged motorcycle is a true challenge.
    00:00 Intro
    00:43 Birth of the turbo
    02:19 Drag racing
    02:59 Kawasaki Z1R-TC
    04:35 Honda CX 500 Turbo
    05:27 Yamaha XJ 650 Seca Turbo
    07:01 Honda CX 650 Turbo
    07:52 Suzuki XN85 Turbo
    08:59 Kawasaki GPz 750 Turbo
    09:55 End of turbo bikes
    10:41 Reasons
    11:22 Motorrad’s opinion
    11:55 Rebirth of supercharging
    12:04 Super thanks to Patreons
    - Vlog -
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    - Disclaimer -
    This video is fair use under U.S. copyright law because it is transformative in nature, uses no more of the original than necessary and has no negative effect on the market for the original work.
    - Credits -
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Komentáře • 725

  • @TachySteve
    @TachySteve Před 2 lety +769

    I have a turbo hayabusa. The issues that I have had were self inflicted. I have 14000 miles total on the bike and it’s been turbo’d for 8000. When the turbo kicks in and you hear it spoil and feel the power come in it feels insane! It is the most fun on two wheels imo!

    • @woodgrain18
      @woodgrain18 Před 2 lety +34

      I have a buddy with a turbo ZX10 built motor and trans air shifted it’s a street/strip build but more strip then any thing but sees a ton of street miles. I’ve personally seen it make over 460whp on the dyno but I’ve only rode it on what he calls the street tune and still makes 350+hp and it’s the scariest thing with less than 4 wheels I’ve ever drove even at 100+mph on the highway it will do rolling burnouts as long or how dumb you are sometimes it will feel like it’s gonna wheelie and then blow the tire and spin or feel like it’s gonna spin and wheelie it’s a wild bike you couldn’t pay me to take it to the track put it on the the 2 step and make a pass it scares me and I’m hard to scare he doesn’t run it on a slick the class’s he runs you have to run a DOT tire he runs a Shinko or something like that They don’t say drag radial on them but that’s basically what they are he’s been 4.90’s with no bars and a dot tire In the 1/8 it’s got more in he’s made some changes over the winter it’s got some stupid expensive carbon fiber wheels and bearings and a new intercooler and cold side! We will see soon

    • @TachySteve
      @TachySteve Před 2 lety +5

      @@woodgrain18 I run a shinko hook-up pro. I can dump the clutch and start a rolling burnout at 80-90 😅 on the street.

    • @rattyratstuff7125
      @rattyratstuff7125 Před 2 lety +15

      @@TachySteve parents didnt approve of me and a racing buddy{dirtbikes under honda} doing a day trip to la and back from sacramento on turbo busas. in hs. never looked down passed 220. both were friends drag bikes. around 4 hour ride no traffic at 150+ the whole way. we were god damn idiots

    • @TachySteve
      @TachySteve Před 2 lety +6

      @@rattyratstuff7125 how dare you! I would never go over the speed limit 🫢

    • @exothermal.sprocket
      @exothermal.sprocket Před 2 lety +4

      And how many manufacturers are going to sell 300-400 horsepower motorcycles to the common person?

  • @phil955i
    @phil955i Před 2 lety +241

    The Honda was very clever & basically showed off their technical prowess at the time, but the Kawasaki was definitely the best of the bunch. But, like 6 cylinders, it was an evolutionary cul de sac for production motorcycles. The Kawasaki H2, being supercharged has re-opened the interest in forced induction.

    • @AKlover
      @AKlover Před 2 lety +19

      Super chargers have a more subtle boost spread over the entire power band the turbo has a window it operates in. Too much compression is bad it will kill the engine faster.

    • @dialingtron9473
      @dialingtron9473 Před 2 lety +4

      @@AKlover centrifugal superchargers raise boost in a linear way compared to rpm but the subtly of the boost curve is dependent on the gear ratio that's running it. Turbo and exhaust technology has come a long way since the bikes of the 80's and with a proper sized turbo a lot of modern bikes could definitely stay within boost throughout most of the usable powerband easily. A simple way to keep a turbo's boost more linear would be different driving modes working together with an electronic wastegate to allow different desired boost levels. As for the longevity of engines under high compression, you gotta pay to play if you want to go fast.

    • @anonimous2451
      @anonimous2451 Před 2 lety +2

      talking about the CBX vs the Z1300 is not the same as forced induction. Had you mentioned the Seca 650 TURBO I would have had at least an oz of respect for ya, but, you talking about oranges when apples are being sold bruh. Wake the Fu*k Up. I do have a ZX11 I installed a turbo on with a 4 lb boost gate limit which is more than enough cause the bike is stoopid fast to begin with. With the turbo and re-jetting I can outrun the H2 Easily, not the H2R with the supercharger on it, but all other super bikes that try and out run me find out just how lame their STOCK bikes really are. Love nothing more than to leave a Ducati, Aprilia, H2 or any other liter bike in my dust. Then they pull up cause the turbo is hidden from view and ask what I did to it. I tell them I used a power commander and increased jet sizes. Then one of em said I coulda swore i heard a turbo kick in. I then told the truth and they all wanted me to boost their bikes. I wished em all the best of luck, but NO was my answer. It takes considerable skill and testing to get it all dialed in just right, and when you hit that sweet spot, well the bike speaks for itself.

    • @phil955i
      @phil955i Před 2 lety +4

      @@anonimous2451 cool story bro 🙄

    • @teamgonzo9289
      @teamgonzo9289 Před 2 lety

      It was about a decade before the CX ever found a turbo, here in Southern California you could buy and have the factory install in American turbo pack turbo charger. And some like the KZ1R TC, could be ordered right from the factory.
      Too bad none of the turbo bikes you can get from the factory, never had an intercooler. The whole reason the supercharged H2 isn't intercool, less plumbing but more importantly it flows so much air it doesn't need one. I had high hopes for the variable vein systems found in a few turbos. Showed a lot of promise, just not the right guys working on the problem.
      Ooops, never mind, wrote that before I saw the video

  • @upsidedowndog1256
    @upsidedowndog1256 Před 2 lety +107

    I can't speak for the other turbobikes but my 85 Kawasaki 750 turbo is a real pleasure to ride. Yes, when it spools up you better have a trajectory planned out. They should never have stopped building them. Crazy fun.

    • @paulrogers6037
      @paulrogers6037 Před 2 lety +6

      I drove a 750 Turbo for over 100k miles between 1986 and 1993. Such a great bike, but when the turbo kicked in, you'd better be holding on tightly and leaning forward. I'm 6'5" and 210 lbs., and there were a couple of times I got scared, barely able to hold on.

    • @Bozemanjustin
      @Bozemanjustin Před rokem +2

      I've ridden motorcycles for years, only recently thought about turbos.
      From watching this video, if there's so much problem with delivery timing, has anybody ever thought to just have a wastegate that's open all the time and let the turbos spool up how they do.. and then like formula 1 when you're ready for the power you press a button which closes the wastegate delivering the boost exactly when you're ready for it and when you let off the button with your thumb, wastegate goes back to its naturally full open position and dump the boost.
      Basically boost on demand, not whenever you hit a certain RPM
      Not sure if this would be effective, but I know they're making superchargers with bypass when you're going 55 on the highway. And it takes like less than one horsepower to turn the unit when you're just blowing off
      So it seems like you could have a turbo on a bike and just ride the bike as normal and then have 10 psi when you hit a button

    • @upsidedowndog1256
      @upsidedowndog1256 Před rokem

      @@Bozemanjustin
      The wastegate is accuated by pressure by a hose. What you say may be possible, especially with modern turbos. As for my 85 Kawi, I would not change anything. You already have a throttle to command the turbo, and the learning curve isn't too steep if you understand how a turbo works. The 84 85 Kawi has a built in second map in the ecu that allows for overboost to keep the turbo spooled up for less lag. It is controlled by fueling only. The timing isn't even variable by boost pressure, only fueling. Putting the ecu in "race mode" allows for fuel pressure changes and makes the thing a real hoot to ride. The throttle is all you need. It is like riding an early 80s 2 stroke motocross bike except much heavier with about 4 times the HP. Mine is currently tuned to about 140 HP and I have no plans for more. That much boost at once is a fantastic sensation that I plan to enjoy until I can no longer ride. Point and shoot. Great fun! Wastegate not actuated lets the turbo make over 35psi for short time, can only maintain about 26psi. They have a low compression ratio (8.5:1) for such conditions. On a dyno the "power banana" gets huge with high boost and low compression ratios.

    • @scottlochans4180
      @scottlochans4180 Před 10 měsíci

      @@paulrogers6037 kinda Famous, Infamous for trying to Throw Rider off the back, when turbo Engaged. Couriered on a nearly new Kawa. 750 turbo, '84, got chance to Thrash it Daily, Countless times, Lovely.

    • @paulrogers6037
      @paulrogers6037 Před 10 měsíci

      @@scottlochans4180 I was a courier on mine, too! It was a leftover 1985 and bought it brand new in 1986. $3699! I was looking at the Yamaha Fazer 700, but decided on the turbo. Everyone told me it was a mistake. Nope - just a wonderful, perfect bike. Never needed anything except regular maintenance. And yes, it could easily throw you off when the turbo engaged. Scared the @#% out of me a couple of times.

  • @ResonantFrequency
    @ResonantFrequency Před 2 lety +112

    Some missing context in this video is why the Japanese started putting turbos on their motorcycles in the first place. At the time Reagan put a huge tariff on larger displacement motorcycles to protect Harley Davidson's sales who were in a very desperate financial situation at the time. The Japanese went to turbos to gt higher horsepower machines on the market with lower displacement engines and dodge the tariffs. Except for the Z1RTC, that's just Kawasaki being insane awesome.

    • @fungo6631
      @fungo6631 Před rokem +1

      LMAO, so much for Reagan's and US right's "free market". As soon as the free market worked against US companies, such as when more fuel efficient Japanese and European cars became hot hits, they all doubled down.

    • @redneck94chevy
      @redneck94chevy Před 4 měsíci

      I just heard about this the other day. Apparently, at some point, Honda put a car motor in the motorcycle, and then they had to change the engine size because of Harley Davidson being afraid of being outsold. So his bike has the smaller displacement 4 cylinder engine because of that.

  • @stumpysbigadventures7832
    @stumpysbigadventures7832 Před 2 lety +23

    I had a 750 turbo in the early 90s, it was the best vehicle i have ever experienced. It had a straight through pipe, and it could power wheelie with a pillion at about 80mph and used to power slide exiting roundabouts... And i blew off 2 Gpz1100s on the drag strip... And lost a police BMW bike on twisty roads once. Good times.

    • @clutchupproductions332
      @clutchupproductions332 Před rokem

      Makes me wanna gpz swap my kz650

    • @scottlochans4180
      @scottlochans4180 Před 10 měsíci

      Kinda Famous, Infamous for trying to Throw Riders OFF the back, ?, Hang On, for life, when Turbo Engaged. Couriered on a nearly new Kawa.750 GPZ turbo, '84 Thrashed it Daily, Countless times, Lovely bike. Enjoyed my nearly new Kawa. GT750 shaft drive, more all round, than the turbo, GT would sit at a Planted 140 mph. ALL DAY LONG, got the £50 Fine, 3 Months ban, that proves it. March '85 Glasgow to Leeds, Booting it down to England, near Carlisle, Petrol station?, Police come flying in, ' You're Under Arrest ?, We've been chasing you, for 30 miles, God knows what I was doing ?, Dumfries Sheriff Court, Guesstimated 138 mph. ?, Good guess. Match '19, no bike Kawasaki, for 27 years, got a 05 very very healthy Bandit 650 inj., 20, 21 months of Blessed Bandit Time Times, got a PhD Masters Degree in Bandit Torque Enjoyment only, nothing technical, at least 58, 59 times more biking joy, than the turbo. I'm now a HOPEFULLY only, semi retired Crazy Mad Banditateer, FEKKIN Banditless Banditaholic, ruined for any other bike, and I ain't even lying.Yours truly Scott Loch. Na, Professor Bandit B.T.E. Torque Enjoyment only, out.

  • @meejinhuang
    @meejinhuang Před 2 lety +230

    Modern turbos are better now with less lag. The higher insurance cost is what may have killed them.

    • @kopronko
      @kopronko Před 2 lety +23

      Obviously the visio ricer is not educated enough about the new turbines .

    • @Original_Major
      @Original_Major Před 2 lety +8

      @@kopronko someones sounds mad

    • @kopronko
      @kopronko Před 2 lety

      @James Wheeler Only idiots are satisfyed with useless rumbling around, combined with a lack of power.

    • @kopronko
      @kopronko Před 2 lety +1

      @@Original_Major wasn't me ...

    • @rayzor285
      @rayzor285 Před 2 lety

      Wrong. It's widely accepted that a naturally aspirated motorcycle of equal power (larger displacement) will always outperform the turbocharged motorcycle

  • @GTRZE70
    @GTRZE70 Před 2 lety +371

    Turbos don't ruin anything. Bad tuning and lack of effective boost control ruin things. Turbos do exactly what you tell them to do.

    • @kopronko
      @kopronko Před 2 lety +2

      @Edward Elizabeth Hitler Amennn :-)

    • @MegaAsdlf
      @MegaAsdlf Před 2 lety +55

      A turbo raped and murdered my wife and kids. Turbos have ruined my life. #standuptoturbos

    • @scootbmx01
      @scootbmx01 Před 2 lety +12

      The delay in response and power is a turn off for some people

    • @lostinspace699
      @lostinspace699 Před 2 lety +1

      @@MegaAsdlf I like turbos ,,,

    • @scootbmx01
      @scootbmx01 Před 2 lety +10

      @Edward Elizabeth Hitler it's really not. Trust me. You will never get a turbo engine to respond like a well done n/a or pdsc engine

  • @josephegginton4055
    @josephegginton4055 Před 2 lety +45

    My mates got a bmw bike with a wrx turbo on it. It's really fast but spends most of its life in a garage being fixed cus its always breaking

    • @fintanoclery2698
      @fintanoclery2698 Před 2 lety +7

      My mate's got an old Jaguar XJS12 that's similar except it's slow on top of always being in the shop.

    • @wolftmfg
      @wolftmfg Před 2 lety +1

      😄 of course 👍 Nice hobby though.

    • @SejeSteen
      @SejeSteen Před 2 lety +3

      Imagine getting low reliability BMW with premium price parts😂 LOL

    • @michaelmurphy6869
      @michaelmurphy6869 Před 2 lety +2

      Its kind of a trade off, want power... Things are going to break. Ride it on the weekends, fix it during the week.

    • @godlikeghost4839
      @godlikeghost4839 Před 2 lety +1

      Because of bmw lol

  • @donmccarthy2412
    @donmccarthy2412 Před 2 lety +26

    I've lost track of how many Motorcycles I've owned. My GPZ750 Turbo was to most fun of any of them. Turbo lag was almost no existent, you could actually get full boost at a stoplight in neutral.

    • @qbasic16
      @qbasic16 Před 2 lety +1

      Obviously you get no turbo lag when you already start in high RPM thus the turbo is spooled up.

  • @Tom-wl9sx
    @Tom-wl9sx Před 2 lety +21

    I had a 92 Suzuki 1100r with turbo and Intercooler back in the days. It had carburetors so it was a little bit wild. Got 345 horsepower on the backwheel. Best and funniest bike I ever owned 🤣

    • @derSchenns
      @derSchenns Před 2 lety

      Best Bike ever!

    • @woopimagpie
      @woopimagpie Před 2 lety

      345hp, holy heck. Must have been quite the handful when you gave it the beans.

  • @yohann2768
    @yohann2768 Před 2 lety +86

    One place where it could be interesting would be on a big tourer like a goldwing. Those bikes are already big, complex and expensive. Plus, they would benefit from the torque increase from a turbo, and from the eventual engine downsizing.

    • @MM_in_Havasu
      @MM_in_Havasu Před 2 lety +18

      There was a guy in Canada several years ago who built a turbo kit for a GL1800, guess it made enough power to annihilate any sportbike in a roll-on up to about 140 mph. No room on that bike to turbo it effectively though.

    • @SalveMonesvol
      @SalveMonesvol Před 2 lety +9

      They don't make those engines large for power. They want i6 for smoothness. Power is a byproduct of making an i6 efficient.

    • @brandonmcandrew4859
      @brandonmcandrew4859 Před 2 lety +2

      I think a supercharger may be better as the power should be able to be deliver smother power

    • @axlejohnson9156
      @axlejohnson9156 Před 2 lety +2

      The point of a turbo on a road bike is to make up for lack of displacement. Those big tour bikes have tons of torgue and displacement. Most are over 1800 cc.
      They have monster engines in them and the power comes on smoothly and is very linear. A turbo may only upset that kind of bike. I can see why that may seem
      exciting. I'm afraid that it would make the bike almost unmanageable. When the turbo kicks in on a small displacement bike, it's easy to handle. A turbo on a
      large displacement bike would be like have a jet pack under you. The front end would begin to float and off the road you would go.
      I don't know if you remember a bike Honda made. The V65 Honda Magna. A V4 cylinder 1100 cc cruiser. The front end was racked out and the seat sat low
      and back behind this massive engine. No turbo, just natural aspiration. The most common accident with that bike was due to the excessive acceleration and
      torque. As the bike accelerated, the front end began to slowly rise. Eventually taking the rider somewhere they didn't intend to go.

    • @mxracingunlimitedltd7784
      @mxracingunlimitedltd7784 Před 2 lety

      Very true. S/C would be probably be better and smoother though..

  • @sirbow2
    @sirbow2 Před 2 lety +28

    A modern turbo bike would be an entirely different animal compared to factory and homemade 80s turbos 🤦

    • @VisioRacer
      @VisioRacer  Před 2 lety +3

      Yet, they do not exist even in 2022. There are rumours and concept, but without a production model we can only speculate if ever something…

    • @Turbowagon
      @Turbowagon Před 2 lety +3

      @@VisioRacer not much speculation to be done when you see how well a properly tuned home built system runs.

    • @simonspencer397
      @simonspencer397 Před 2 lety +6

      @@VisioRacer They don't exist purely because there is no need for them to exist. A 1000cc engine provides all the power 99.9% of people ever need in a cheaper less complicated package. But as a proof of concept, it would now be easily possible to create a turbo bike that was so smooth in power delivery, you wouldn't even know it was turbo'd.

    • @michawesoy2728
      @michawesoy2728 Před 2 lety

      @@VisioRacer umm... Kawasaki Ninja H2 is turbocharged production model, available in US and EU since 2015. And it's regarded as fast and agile sportbike.

    • @VisioRacer
      @VisioRacer  Před 2 lety +4

      @@michawesoy2728 It is supercharged, not turbocharged

  • @Ro_Wa
    @Ro_Wa Před 2 lety +61

    Yamaha filed a few patents a couple of years ago, which have similarities to a turbocharged MT-07 and MT-09. I really hope turbocharging will make it one more time before electric bikes will be the only option. Great video showing the history of this topic.

    • @janjakus3596
      @janjakus3596 Před 2 lety +12

      Real biker would never buy an electric motorcycle

    • @JohnSmith-ef8nr
      @JohnSmith-ef8nr Před 2 lety +3

      I think Honda also did a turbo patent for the Africa twin.
      I think If turbos come back it will be to reduce emissions like thay have on cars.

    • @axelotl86
      @axelotl86 Před 2 lety +5

      @@janjakus3596 real inner love to ride and don’t care where the power comes from.

    • @SwainixFPV
      @SwainixFPV Před 2 lety +4

      @@axelotl86 yup, I really don't need a shaking or noisy engine to have fun I just want turns lol. The only thing I'd be missing is the technical part of blipping down while breaking, staying in the right rpm range etc. Having to play with the clutch at low speeds is also fun in a way, because it's so satisfying for me in a sense, but a well made gas response wouldn't bother me at low speeds on an electric motorcycle.

    • @changsangma1915
      @changsangma1915 Před 2 lety

      @@janjakus3596 ......purely an entitlement narrative on what constitute a biker or motorists in general. I don't see who writes such rule books...maybe the obsolete bunch unwilling to the complexity of changing world dynamics.

  • @dicktomasko1553
    @dicktomasko1553 Před 2 lety +27

    Ive had my cx500 turbo since new...Back in the day I cut the heads .050 which gave it about 8 to 1 compression and close to 95hp. Its been a joy to drive for 40 years. Still is like new and is very comfortable...At 65 I don't need another bike..The cx was my 15th bike in 1982. Now I have 2 modified electric sur ron bikes. I go trail riding every day and just plug it in. Can't have more fun...Great video.

    • @marinjeam
      @marinjeam Před 2 lety +3

      Respect, after all these years the CX500 Turbo is still one of the most beautiful motorcycles ever designed. ps. and I,m an Italian motorcycle enthousiast ,)

    • @kopronko
      @kopronko Před 2 lety

      @@marinjeam We need more Moto Guzzi Turbo :-) czcams.com/video/ZgWf821iy0E/video.html

    • @RPRosen-ki2fk
      @RPRosen-ki2fk Před 2 lety +2

      @@marinjeam It's no wonder you love the styling. Honda had Italian stylist, Giovanni Michelotti, a prolific & influential designer create the innovative and curvaceous fairing and body work.

  • @larsjrgensen5975
    @larsjrgensen5975 Před 2 lety +20

    Instead of adding turbo, loads of pipes, intercooler, boost controller and other supporting mods, just add 200-400cc to the NA engine.
    Turboes begin to make sense above 1200cc.
    I love my 2.0 turbo car, but it looses breath up top and it needs ½ second to react from 0- full throttle (the opposite of what you want on a bike).
    A 10 year newer turbo would change things, but twin scroll, ball bearing, billet wheel and all that would just increase complexity and cost even more.

  • @waldi2302
    @waldi2302 Před 2 lety +2

    I drove a GPZ 750Turbo which belonged to a friend of mine. I was 20 years old in 91 and thought I am Freddy Spencer or Wayne Rainy. My friend said, if the boost gauge is in the middle it is enaugh.
    I drove on the nearly empty Autobahn45 and spanned the rope. I thought I was flying. The powerdelivery was verry impressive after a few km I decided to go back on the twisty roads we have here in Hessen. I read signs of towns I never heard of before. I had to admit, that I was driven much more km than I thought. On the country roads it took me all my skills to tame that beast but I made it home without scratches.
    A few years later Kawa came out with the 16V RAM Air 750 GPZ and a better handling. But that Turbo expirience I made sticks still in my mind.

  • @Tato4623
    @Tato4623 Před 2 lety +4

    As a 750turbo owner i can tell from experience these bikes are real fun. Not the easiest to drive, when u get that turbo kicking in man you better hold tight , but when You get the feel for them its hard to drive any other bike ever

  • @kimeldiin1930
    @kimeldiin1930 Před 2 lety +20

    Well the XN had a frame in stiffness comparable to the Katana or even possibly better , hence the superior handling , the drawback was the Nicco Bakker patented rear suspension "Full Floater" which Suzuki had made FAR to progressive , even with a spring from a BIC pen or similar it was stupidly progressive , but one could ride around that once having learned the quirks....just by installing a bleed valve on the boost line to the ECU and a progressive fuel pressure regulator one easily got it up to 130 hp... mine is today 200 hp.with further tweeks....

  • @hpa101
    @hpa101 Před 2 lety +7

    I still want one anyway though.... 😅 - Taz.

  • @ricepony33
    @ricepony33 Před 2 lety +11

    I would think cruiser bikes could really benefit from having a small turbo setup like VW 1.8T, low end effortless torque.
    For street bikes the linear rotrex style superchargers are the way to go!

  • @TheNegativeSpacePhotographer

    I think about one thing for now a very long time and I want to build it at some point in my life
    A 1.6 liter turbocharged diesel bike

  • @hansvader7515
    @hansvader7515 Před 2 lety +2

    I really love how you and your chanel evolved. Your english now is really good and you still make really good content

  • @JoshuaHardie
    @JoshuaHardie Před 2 lety

    Thank you for all the videos you create. They are informative and amazing.

  • @oldieman730
    @oldieman730 Před 2 lety +9

    I owned a CX-500 Turbo in the 80's, and LOVED IT. Great all rounder cycle single or two-up, rain or shine, and perfect high speed tourer. I NEVER experienced a 2 second turbo lag... ever.

    • @socaljet
      @socaljet Před 2 lety

      Yea I had one,my friend had one,the only problem was turbo seals and they start smoking,my friend would win racing RDs in the quarter mile and it was funny to hear all that furry from a two stroke and the turbo put put put down the 1/4mile way ahead of the rd

  • @wolftmfg
    @wolftmfg Před 2 lety

    That intro 😭 Nice 😂 Thanks for the video again. Would love me to own a GPZ.

  • @platinumkenpachi5923
    @platinumkenpachi5923 Před 2 lety +10

    Been watching you for 6 years now love your content 💪

  • @johnsmithfakename8422
    @johnsmithfakename8422 Před 2 lety +4

    Even though I am not part of the generation, I greatly appreciate the time when motorcycle manufacturers were adventurous.

    • @Billswiftgti
      @Billswiftgti Před 2 lety

      You mean, the Japanese.

    • @changsangma1915
      @changsangma1915 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Billswiftgti ....the Japanese seem to be the ones that display creativity on two wheeled machines, both real as well as fiction...like Akira or Final Fantasy.

  • @AZREDFERN
    @AZREDFERN Před 2 lety +63

    Superchargers are the only way to go. I’d like to see a positive displacement super for the smoothest power delivery.

    • @joe125ful
      @joe125ful Před 2 lety +5

      N/A Forever!

    • @davonmulder8458
      @davonmulder8458 Před 2 lety +1

      on an inline it's kinda difficult tho

    • @WildWildWeasel
      @WildWildWeasel Před 2 lety +4

      ​@@davonmulder8458 You have the Ninja H2 though, basically running a belt-driven turbo.

    • @davonmulder8458
      @davonmulder8458 Před 2 lety +14

      @@WildWildWeasel yes, that is a centrifical supercharger, this comment talks about a positive displacement supercharger, wich is a very different design

    • @WildWildWeasel
      @WildWildWeasel Před 2 lety +1

      @@davonmulder8458 twin screw ones are a whole nother animal though cus of space constraints, that's why Kawasaki didn't go with one.

  • @cujet
    @cujet Před 2 lety

    Oh forgot to add, thank you for the very informative video. I appreciate the research you do.

  • @marshallbrowne5371
    @marshallbrowne5371 Před 2 lety +6

    I really enjoyed my Yamaha XJ turbo ad actually club raced one year against open class bikes. It was a lot of fun and I was never last. I also enjoyed it as a sport tourer. Probably one of the funest bikes that I have owned.

    • @jackstandproductions6558
      @jackstandproductions6558 Před 2 lety

      i have the NA xj750 maxim, its amazing, just did 1k miles yesterday on it, amazing bike. will take me anywhere

    • @cohocarl
      @cohocarl Před 2 lety

      I had purchased a new '82 in '84 and had the Yamaha power up kit (simply tube from wastegate to airbox) that brought boost up to 15lb (if I remember right). Once boosting, just as quick as my buddy's GS1100. Absolute blast. I had made a straight pipe for the turbo & sounded cool as hell. Damn I miss that bike. Perfect sport tourer for here in MI.

    • @marshallbrowne5371
      @marshallbrowne5371 Před 2 lety +1

      @@cohocarl Yes the power up kit added a lot. I sure miss it.

  • @fisiosaiter
    @fisiosaiter Před 2 lety +4

    The problem was the turbo lag, today we have ways to fix it, like in the f1 cars. Maybe we will see the idea coming back in the future.

  • @paulkiddier659
    @paulkiddier659 Před 2 lety +3

    I had a GPZ750 turbo. Apart from the turbo being a bit fragile having only phosphor bronze bearings it was a great fun bike.

  • @benmadderom2281
    @benmadderom2281 Před 2 lety +2

    I absolutely LOVED my CX500 Turbo. I commuted on it, and fell in love with the bike. The turbo didn't really spool up if you were just grannying around, and that was great. All you needed to do for a good boost is downshift. ;)

  • @paulh6591
    @paulh6591 Před 2 lety +2

    I love the '83 CX650TD I bought in 1998. I still have it and it still tries to pull my arms off. When I was looking for a new car in 2010, I bought a Honda Fit over its competition because I wanted a car built by the company that had the audacity to build that exotic, reliable bike. 12 Year and 180,000 trouble-free miles later, that car is 100% reliable. Honda lost gobs of money developing their turbo but the patents and technology transferred to their autos and gave them a huge edge over the American cars of the malaise era.

    • @MrTheHillfolk
      @MrTheHillfolk Před 2 lety

      Honda has an excellent grasp of airflow....I'm thinking of that rc166 that revved to like 20-22k back in the 60s.
      All I've seen are videos ,and the comments are funny because every other one is : 2 stroke? 🤣
      Nah, just good old revs.

  • @igorschannel
    @igorschannel Před 2 lety +2

    We had that turbo bike here in Brazil and not a lot of people knew how to deal with the turbo spooling up mid RPM, it used to kill it's drivers, reason why it got the nickname of Black Widow.

  • @racing_mntage1584
    @racing_mntage1584 Před 2 lety +4

    h2r sweating in the corner while reading the thumbnail

    • @kitsachie.
      @kitsachie. Před 2 lety +1

      The H2 is supercharged not turbo charged.
      Turbos make more power but the power curve is not linear
      Super chargers have a linear power curve just like naturally aspirated vehicles but are limited by the engine rpm itself.
      Turbos are just dangerous on motorcycles because if you get that power boost while in a corner you may lose traction.

    • @racing_mntage1584
      @racing_mntage1584 Před 2 lety +2

      @@kitsachie. oh yeah i forgot, i just wanted to make a funny comment tbh😅 anyways thanks for correcting me nicely mostly people are mean

  • @joseguzman1073
    @joseguzman1073 Před 2 lety +19

    Smiles per gallon indeed, wonder if there could be a way to implement a bypass system to use boost when it's needed instead of all the time

    • @jammygamer8961
      @jammygamer8961 Před 2 lety

      maybe you could set up an exhaust that directs the gases based of a switch?
      So like a sport mode of sorts

    • @FrmerK20
      @FrmerK20 Před 2 lety +1

      you can run without boost yes

    • @aircraftnut15
      @aircraftnut15 Před 2 lety +7

      So like a wastegate

    • @yummyhershey5902
      @yummyhershey5902 Před 2 lety +5

      This "bypass" system has existed on cars for decades now too. Some people use this to run something called "boost by gear" where the car makes less boost, and thus less power in lower gears. There's also boost by speed, which is self explanatory.

    • @joe125ful
      @joe125ful Před 2 lety

      @@yummyhershey5902 Boost by gears can work well on car but on bike???

  • @LS-uv9gg
    @LS-uv9gg Před 2 lety +15

    I put 97,000 KM's on my '82 CX500Turbo, and between it and my '81 Yamaha RD350LC, they were the best, most fun bikes I've ever owned. No one who didn't own both of these at the same time and put many, many miles on them 24/7/365, will ever believe me when I say the CXTurbo was like a giant, soft and comfy version of the RD. Their powerbands were virtually identical, lol. It's a real laugh to listen to people who have never ridden, let alone owned a Turbo bike, to say a single damned bad thing about them.

    • @ForeverNeverwhere1
      @ForeverNeverwhere1 Před 2 lety

      The Katana was a different beast to the CX 500 turbo though. The Katana turbo came on power like an on off switch catching a few riders out mid corner.

  • @darrylvohs5526
    @darrylvohs5526 Před 2 lety +1

    We had a blast on our 85 gpz 750 turbo, my wife would watch the boost gauge over my shoulder she knew when to hang on!
    I have a yamaha 650 xj turbo thar I restored. I added a boost controler, shimmed the pop off valve, HD clutch springs and a boost gauge. It's fun but no Kawi.

  • @MotoTvWoodsFarm
    @MotoTvWoodsFarm Před 2 lety

    cool video thanks for the information very helpful

  • @johncantrell614
    @johncantrell614 Před 2 lety +1

    The 80s were a golden age for motorcycles. Some concepts did well, some did not, but there was always the push to make the bikes do better and better, at a pace that has seemed to slow after those times. All in all, it was a great time to be a motorcycle enthusiast!

  • @fidelcatsro6948
    @fidelcatsro6948 Před 2 lety +1

    i left wheels through time as soon as this got uploaded !!

  • @walkingSherpa
    @walkingSherpa Před 2 lety +1

    Hi
    Found this video a few moments ago.
    I have a GPz750Turbo from 1985.
    Bought it second Hand with some issues.
    My first idea was to provide some stability to the engine. When driving , i found out that after only one trip of about 250 Km's the fresh Engine-oil was done. I put a much bigger Oilcooler on ( which looks disgusting ) and built an Oil-temperature-gauge. Still the temparature of the oil showed 160° C some time, which indicated an oil-change the very next time too. Additionally did i lose/burn a lot of engine-oil.
    Then i had an accident at quite low speed (~ 50Km/h ) were i broke my back twice. Since then , this beauty is waiting for repair, but my life became turbulent and ugly then.
    I think, the engine has some design-flaws. The most important is that oil is vaporising when it becomes to hot and sucked into the intake. Therefore i would adopt the windbox with a oil-collector to let the oil off when home. Second, the thing that helped the engine to survive most was the addition of Ceramic-protection to the engine-oil. I would not drive this type of engine without it.
    Finally :
    Man , i miss the moments when the Turbo pulled me up mountainroads as if it were flat.
    Modern bikes have much less weight. But the high weight of about 260Kg's makes this bike unique imho.

  • @arthurjennings5202
    @arthurjennings5202 Před 2 lety +3

    Having, in my salad days, driven a KZ900 turbo vs a Suzuki 1100, I can definitely say that the turbo bike simply wasn't much fun. It was fast, sure, but it was not quick. The Suzuki on the other hand was like astoundingly quick. It actually reminded me of a 2 stroke the way it pulled through the gears, lifting and carrying the front wheel in a third gear roll on out of a sweeper.

  • @martiniv8924
    @martiniv8924 Před 2 lety +6

    My Kawasaki 750 turbo did big miles, and was as near enough as fast as the several 900r’s were , so you missed out on a very special bike 😉

  • @TobiasRieperGER
    @TobiasRieperGER Před 2 lety +3

    I had a 1977 Kawasaki Z 1000 A2. I am crying while seeing this...
    Mine was a i4 with 4 carbs. It was horror so sync them perfectly. BUT if you have done your Job right, this bike was a dream to drive. Comfortable, powerful, easy to repair and modify. I had gas powered shocks and fork. Sporty tyres with good grip.
    It was my dreambike and last year i had to sell it. The fuel here in germany become so bad, it destroyed all sealings on the tank, fuellines, carbs... When i have fixed all leaks, i had 4 weeks and then do it all again.
    As i said, sync 4 carbs is horror.
    I ended in spending more time in fixing than driving.

    • @ahobimo732
      @ahobimo732 Před 2 lety

      Was it the ethanol in the fuel that was causing all the damage? If so, that can be removed pretty easily. Just add water and let it settle into separate layers. You end up with less fuel, but at least it's real gasoline.

    • @TobiasRieperGER
      @TobiasRieperGER Před 2 lety +2

      @@ahobimo732 I owned the bike since mid 90s. Back then i NEVER had problems. Yes i had to clean the carbs once a year, but that was all.
      I tried the ethanol reducing in 2020 and 2021. In this small scale it was not really a problem. But the reduced fuel had other problems. It has lower octane rates. Instead of 98 octane, it got arround 90. I had to use the choke even in summer when starting.
      The whole garage smelled like bad fuel and i got this "dirty water" i don't know where to dispose. Tip it in a drain at the road could cause problems. I guess the police would call this environmental pollution and give me penalty.
      So thanks for the hint. I have done all i could to keep it. The only solution would be to convert from carbs to fuel injection. A later model had a fuel injection, but my local bike shop said, i had to change so much, that i should buy the later model. Its much easier.
      Now the prices for fuel go up. Here in germany we pay arround 2 € per litre. That is more than 7,5 € per gallon. Or $ 7.9 per gallon.

    • @ahobimo732
      @ahobimo732 Před 2 lety

      @@TobiasRieperGER Yeah...I never thought about the octane problem. It makes sense though. I live in eastern Canada where there is FAR less government regulation, so disposing of the water wouldn't be a problem here, but I can see how it would be different for you. Honestly, I don't know if I could handle living in Germany. I have so many freedoms that I take for granted here. But on the other hand, I'm practically living in the middle of the woods, so... 🤷🏼‍♂️
      Fuel had gotten a lot more expensive here in Canada recently as well. It's about $2.25/litre here right now. It'll probably hit $3.00 before the year ends. The transition to electric is being pushed pretty hard. Even though the technology isn't really ready yet (imo). It might work for urban environments, where people only have small distances to travel, but for rural areas, I don't think it's really feasible yet. So us "country folk" are getting kinda screwed.

  • @bumpyroad3251
    @bumpyroad3251 Před rokem +1

    1:30 For the record - the first ever pruduction car to have a turbo charged engine was the fabulous BMW 2002tii back in 1973 and it was a blast. For competition applications they upgraded them up to 500-600 hp (weighting about 900kg!) which was something hard to imagine at that time for 2litre engines. Unfortunately BMW turned their backs on turbo charging technology for gasoline engines for decades and permitted brands like AUDI, Volvo, Saab, Porsche and most Japanese manufacturers like Mitsubishi, Subaru, Toyota to build real iconic cars, while BMW followed their quest for NA perfection.

  • @dukie1616
    @dukie1616 Před 2 lety +4

    I want an H2🤤 love the chirp from it’s supercharger!

    • @vsucountryboy
      @vsucountryboy Před 2 lety +1

      I have an h2 sx se and i love it!

    • @aeror115
      @aeror115 Před 2 lety

      The sound is awesome the chirping sound is hard to hear while riding it on the track

  • @finehit
    @finehit Před 2 lety

    I am so glad you made this video. I have a 1985 Kawasaki 750 turbo still in mint condition. I have a spare engine and a spare rebuilt turbo for it. The engine came off a bike that was stolen from a dealership it had 400 miles on it. I guess you can say it was well broke in. Great video and I'm running 21 lb boost on mine.🤪🤪😉🤣👍👍✌️🍻🍺

  • @Bergwacht
    @Bergwacht Před 2 lety

    3:09 lol that's the Hamburg Reeperbahn police station, I was in a cell there overnight to get sober

  • @phantommaggotxxx
    @phantommaggotxxx Před 2 lety +1

    It's a shame the Suzuki is so rare.. I love the look of those things and would ride one as much as possible..

  • @monogamousbonobo3923
    @monogamousbonobo3923 Před 2 lety

    I was a young teen & really wanted the Suzuki XN85 550CC 4CYL man in the day.

  • @JamesLaserpimpWalsh
    @JamesLaserpimpWalsh Před 2 lety +1

    Back n the 80 my mate stuck a turbocharger he got off a ford cortina onto Suzuki Katana a 900cc one. Think of the loudest bike you ever heard. Now double it lol. He ended up becoming a successful engineer. He did the bike while we were still at school.

  • @hugieflhr03
    @hugieflhr03 Před 2 lety

    On a cool morning my 84 GPZ750 TURBO was a wheelie monster as the boost was insane in these conditions.

  • @Shopsmith10er
    @Shopsmith10er Před 2 lety +1

    Back in 1982 owned a Honda CBX, inline 6 / 24 valve, 6 carb. sport touring. Installed a turbo kit by American Turbo Pak (aka: Mr. Turbo). Hadn't bothered to swap pistons to a lower comp. ratio but kept a conservative boost. Single carb. Stock was rated at 100hp. After the turbo, lost much of the bottom end torque but on the boost was far more entertaining. Did some cannonballing around the states. Triple digits at length would require refuel every 100 miles, yet was more fuel efficient than stock. No comparison and dogs to today's technology, but back then it was cool and everything from lawn chairs to my 82 ur-quattro coupe was turbo.

  • @tekratfl
    @tekratfl Před 2 lety

    When the Buell Firebolt XB9R came out, it was originally supposed to be turbocharged from the factory. Harley Davidson stopped it from happening.

  • @arpan6827
    @arpan6827 Před 2 lety

    Can anyone tell me the intro music please??? Thanks !!

  • @cujet
    @cujet Před 2 lety

    I owned an XN-85 Suzuki turbo when new in the 1980's. Really, it was a very good motorcycle, smooth, refined, comfy. I rode it all over the place, did a few modifications, I raised the boost and tricked the ECU to not shut it down, and I fabricated a big exhaust. The thing was markedly faster with high boost, and would mostly keep up with my friends brand new Ninja 900 (the first generation one). The added boost gave the thing the classic turbo "rush of power" feeling, which I thoroughly enjoyed. It would even spin the skinny rear tire in 2nd by rolling on the throttle. Honestly, I wish I had never sold it, as I really loved the refinement. It took many years before better midsized bikes came out.

  • @tb2260
    @tb2260 Před 2 lety

    In the early 2000s there was the Münch Mammut 2000. It had a turbocharged 2.000 cc engine with a Cosworth cylinder head and made around 260 hp, weighing about 400 kg. 250 were planned, but only 15 were built and only 8 of them were delivered to it’s customers, because of the high production costs. Man, this bike was pure madness on 2 wheels. Maybe you could make a video about it.

  • @davidlanger3295
    @davidlanger3295 Před 2 lety

    You forgot that the Italian motorcycle maker Moroni also manufactured a production turbocharged motorcycle back in the 1980s

  • @davidlanger3295
    @davidlanger3295 Před 2 lety

    I have a 1984 Kawasaki 750 turbo that took a HPU 880cc pistons, a 7mm stroked crankshaft for a total displacement of 1010cc. It also sports a Garrett GT28 turbocharger.

  • @everettreedy7175
    @everettreedy7175 Před rokem

    The gpz 750 turbo was also equipped with fuel injector. Fuel injected turbo...I replaced many intake valves on these

  • @fermitupoupon1754
    @fermitupoupon1754 Před 2 lety +5

    Turbo charging a 50cc GY6 based scooter was a hoot and a half though. Mostly because a moped like that is ridden at wide open throttle anyway, so it's never going to be off boost.
    Swap out some rollers, change the clutch pack, fiddle around with the final drive ratio, shim the bottom of the cylinder and slap on a turbo.
    It's the one big loophole in the legal technical requirements on moped here. You can't increase displacement over 50cc and you can't increase top speed over 55kph. But there is nothing on the books that says you can't strangle 7kW from a 50cc moped and launch like a rocket at the lights.

  • @jamest.5001
    @jamest.5001 Před rokem +1

    A twin scroll turbo, with diverter to get it to spool faster, and if variable geometry could be fitted, making it make power, without lag, and a boost tank to keep boost after shifting,
    I could also imaging a u engine, with counter rotating cranks, with 2cylinders each , with 75mm bore , 40mm
    stroke . 3v per cylinder, or a 2cyl

  • @axlejohnson9156
    @axlejohnson9156 Před 2 lety +1

    The best bike I have ever owned was the Honda CX500T Turbo. That bike was a great highway bike and it also handled well in the corners. A little top heavy with the five
    gallon fuel tank, but hat weight balanced the bike out nicely for long rides. Turbo lag was an issue if you were only interested in 0 to 60. Once the bike reached
    2500 rpm and began to breath. It was a rocket ship. I rarely passed cars one at a time. I passed them in gobs. This bike went from sixty to ninety in a few seconds.
    It was like being on a catapult. The acceleration was addictive. A friend and owner of the local Honda bike dealership had a CBX. He would have to drop two gears
    just to keep me in sight. He would catch me eventually. By then we would have run out of road. We were riding back from the MX Nationals that were held in Milville MN.
    I had my future wife on the back of the bike. A few of the guys were on Gold Wings. One on a 750 Interceptor and one was on a Yamaha 650. He had an older speedometer
    that went over 130 mph. Mine was the new mandated speedometer that only went up to 85 mph. He said I left him when he was doing 122 and we were two up.
    That bike was a blast and I wish I had never sold that bike. I later had a CBR1000. It was a nice bike but it did not accelerate like that CX500T.

  • @ferrarikingdom
    @ferrarikingdom Před 2 lety

    Great video

  • @mikao4087
    @mikao4087 Před rokem

    Is it possible to turbocharged a much smaller engine like 100cc engine?

  • @blurglide
    @blurglide Před 2 lety

    My great uncle has an old clapped out Z1R-TC. Is it worth anything?

  • @HarryVoyager
    @HarryVoyager Před 2 lety

    Don't know if you follow Greg's Airplanes and Autos, but he has some fascinating videos on the issues of implementing turbochargers in aircraft. In anything that you have to be even remotely space and weight conscious, you pretty much have to design the entire aircraft around it.
    As near as I can tell, the P-47 was the only successful turbocharged single engine fighter of the war, and the design literally started from, "I have an engine, and I have a turbo. How do I wrap the smallest possible plane around this?"
    You look at the P-47 and you'll think I'm joking. I am not.

  • @kopronko
    @kopronko Před 2 lety

    The Best Turbo using on a Good bike : czcams.com/video/k8DdbPn19aU/video.html

  • @brycearmstrong2891
    @brycearmstrong2891 Před 2 lety

    What track at 2:00?

  • @stevesmith6236
    @stevesmith6236 Před 2 lety

    I owned three 1984 Kawasaki GPz 750 turbos. One was a full custom motorcycle that one MANY first place and best of show awards. It made a max of 184 rear wheel horsepower. Miss that bike.

  • @TheShift1313
    @TheShift1313 Před 2 lety +1

    I own a gpz750a1 that i built a turbo setup for and spent time on a factory 750 turbo. Kawaski never called it a gpz750 turbo. Just the 750 turbo. And the chassis was essentially the same bit was braced differently. Mainly because of the turbo position. I did hear the tubing was thicker but no way to confirm that. The structure of the engine was the same but kaw used a sub oil pan and second pump for the turbo drain setup to prevent oiling issues. The 750turbo could have done more but there were issues because the gpz11 at the time made 120hp just like the 750. My 750a1 made 80hp. I think they stopped the factory power there but the bikes has a "race mode" you could unlock with some wiring that made the bikes faster.
    750 turbo was very ridable but even my non turbo bike could break the tire loose on lean. My bike now runs gsxr suspension with proper brakes and tires and it made a huge difference. I think the reason these went away was due to the gpz900 and the development of the liquid cooled 4cyl gpz and eventually zx line.

  • @mikerope5785
    @mikerope5785 Před 2 lety

    i think the main reason apart from weight, is that a inline 4 sports motorcycle engine is already extremely snappy in the power band. Adding a turbo to the mix seems like a highside waiting to happen, if you're leaned over and the transition to boost starts.

  • @KevinNguyen-zn4vv
    @KevinNguyen-zn4vv Před 2 lety +2

    A surge in power while cornering is a recipe for disaster. Supercharged is the way to go.

  • @pattyjay9999
    @pattyjay9999 Před 2 lety +3

    Kawasaki's GPZ 750 what's the best of the turbos fastest and best looking.

  • @1xARM
    @1xARM Před 2 lety

    I've ridden the GPz Turbo! Was great fun for a bike of its vintage.

  • @MyFabian94
    @MyFabian94 Před 2 lety +2

    Motorcycle Tires were pushed past their limits in the 80s. On modern Tires these are fine Bikes.

  • @dnorby6990
    @dnorby6990 Před 2 lety +1

    I was waiting for sututututu... 😆

  • @joe125ful
    @joe125ful Před 2 lety

    It can fit better on inline engines with low RPM.
    Also its possible make Twin/Bi-Turbo version too??

  • @Useroffline
    @Useroffline Před rokem

    Got to love those old Nixie-tubes @ 2:48

  • @VeggiePower303
    @VeggiePower303 Před 2 lety +1

    Turbo lag is no longer an issue.
    In the early day they were using too big Turbos so the lag was very noticeable.
    But now they have figured it out and use smaller turbos or sometime Compound Turbos in cars.

    • @VisioRacer
      @VisioRacer  Před 2 lety

      Those turbos are pretty small 🤷🏻‍♂️

    • @VeggiePower303
      @VeggiePower303 Před 2 lety

      @@VisioRacer Yes, but even those are too big.
      Look at the turbo on the Passat TDI engine and that is for a two liter engine.
      For a one liter engine you need half the size of that.
      The Passat has no Turbo lag.

  • @WildWildWeasel
    @WildWildWeasel Před 2 lety +1

    You have the Ninja H2 now though, basically running a belt-driven turbo.

  • @iancain4683
    @iancain4683 Před rokem

    I had a short 20 minute ride on a GPz 750 turbo back when I was 20. I'm in my 50s now and I still get PTSD flashbacks

  • @molonlabe459
    @molonlabe459 Před 2 lety

    I had a '83 GPz 750 normal aspiration. With a header and the carbs jetted that thing roared. I did 130 mph on the 101 and it had more to give.

  • @jaredkennedy6576
    @jaredkennedy6576 Před 2 lety

    I very nearly bought one of those turbo Hondas in 2013. I'm kinda glad I didn't, though, since the Virago 750 I had at the time really was plenty of bike.
    I do think how my GL1200 would do with a turbo, though.

  • @cameronhicks5225
    @cameronhicks5225 Před 2 lety

    Good lord that Kawasaki sounds AMAZING as it goes through the gears

  • @timwerth5106
    @timwerth5106 Před 2 lety

    I own an '84 ZX750 turbo, and there really wasn't much lag stock with the placement of the turbocharger itself. Granted, my bike isn't stock anymore, but I was never worried about lag.

  • @cnance1972
    @cnance1972 Před 2 lety

    Rode a friend's KZ1000 turbo build in '88 and it was not safe in turns ever , that unpredicaturbo was scary

  • @stephenbrouillette4541

    The orange and yellow striping on the Kawasaki Z, though. 👀

  • @Sayua-chan
    @Sayua-chan Před 2 lety +5

    Now they're focused on emissions, so next step is hybrid motorcycles. Honda already has a hybrid scooter. Not sure about the "fun" aspect in those...

    • @toddnickb
      @toddnickb Před 2 lety

      Electric traction motors develop peak torque at zero rpm. It's easy to find small 30 HP electric motors with much more torque than even super sports make.

    • @DesignerOnline
      @DesignerOnline Před 2 lety

      @@toddnickb A slippery clutch kan deliver the same torque at every rpm thats lower than max torque rpm. It's more the waste of energy in the form of heat that burns the clutch.
      There enough torque for a bike when you can make a wheelie, so no need to go electric.

  • @everettreedy7175
    @everettreedy7175 Před rokem

    I worked on these when they were new...the cx500 had a built in diagnostic system....the Yamaha inline 4. If you would weld a smaller washer on the turbo side..it would keep the turbo from kicking in until about 5000 grand instead of 3

  • @CrewCrewlancer
    @CrewCrewlancer Před 2 lety

    i like how the thumbnail is a XJ650 maxim turbo, one of the best turbo bikes lol

  • @devilsreject320
    @devilsreject320 Před rokem

    Had race with gpz 750t about 20 year's back on yzf 600r I was only little faster on straits if any killed it in bends. Brakes/ suspense and weight made difference being pretty new helped a bit .

  • @crezychameau
    @crezychameau Před 2 lety

    I think it could be doable with a hybrid turbo, but i suppose it's not really worth the hassle.
    But one application where it could clearly be used without trouble is on big scooters ! They are rarely used for carving and spirited driving, and the power delivery is super-slushy anyway, i don't think the turbo lag would induce any real problems

  • @PeteDriver530
    @PeteDriver530 Před 2 lety

    I rode a CX650 once, test drove it for a friend who wanted to buy it. He didn't have a license so the dealer wouldn't let him ride it. Did some in town riding to get a feel for it and see how it handled, then went to try some highway time. The onramp had a double curve in it, so I rolled through power on (it did handle nicely). Heading up the ramp I cranked the throttle to about 3/4 so I could merge into traffic. About the time I made a second look back the turbo kicked in, damn near went backwards off the seat! By the time I got my head back forward, the speedo was pegged at 85 and I was still in 2nd gear... Took the next exit and straight back to the dealer, told my friend "No, you'll kill yourself."

  • @Perry_dAccard
    @Perry_dAccard Před 2 lety

    There's a sad skeleton of a Turbo Seca in my basement. I need to build and ride that thing...

  • @gbriank1
    @gbriank1 Před 2 lety

    I think a low pressure turbo is better suited for a motorcycle than the high pressure variant. The provide the best low down torque and then slowly fade out when the motorcycle is at its best at high speeds.

  • @waitpu4817
    @waitpu4817 Před 2 lety

    What about making a turbo shaft design that can bolt directly onto a multi cylinder inline engine's cylinder head exhaust manifold with a small exhaust turbo for every exhaust outlet as a one piece shaft that transmits the power to the charging turbo, that should reduce or eliminate turbo lag, respond quicker, rid a lot of complicated plumbing & dissipate heat better rather than concentrating it?

  • @reecedrury4145
    @reecedrury4145 Před 2 lety +1

    With modern variable vane turbos with near to sod all lag I'm surprised you don't at least see big tourers with downsized turbos. 1.0 turbo Goldwing?