Wednesday, April 29, 2009

DERBI HONDA EXTREME


Derbi Honda Xtreme 50 SM The Derbi Senda is the dream of young Europeans, in love with off-road and supermoto bikes or a mix of both. This Urban-Off-Road is fascinating by its amazing design, its technical features and its price-quality-relation. Being the market leader gives reason to be proud, but at the same time demands to take over responsibility. It's high strength steel double beamed frame with support and protection cradle. The aluminium alloy rims, new fairing graphics and dual headlight make it even more refined and modern. The Derbi Senda Baja 125 combines style, durability, performance and 'go anywhere' versatility to continue the strong history of the Senda model. With modern 4 strokes engine, successfully combined with a double beamed frame, broad tyres and powerful disc brakes. Derbi Senda Xtreme R 50cc. Enjoy the versatility of this bike both on and off the road. With rugged tyres and strong wheels you'll be able to conquer any terrain. New and exciting graphics and durable bodywork give the Senda X-Treme a more modern and stylish look. The top of the range Derbi Senda DRD Pro R pushes the boundaries of what you can expect from both Supermoto and Off Road bikes. Wide handle bars, aluminium frame, progressive rear suspension and big wheels with sticky rubber make these bikes look much bigger than their 50cc capacity would suggest.

THE NEW DRD


Derbi DRD Pro SM Malossi Replica The new DRD PRO 50 SM Réplica, which derived directly from the Derbi Supermotard 80 Malossi, is ready for your daily challenges. With aluminium perimeter double beamed frame with support and protection cradle for the engine, an upside down 40 mm diameter fork, aluminium progressive link swingarm and front brakes with pump and radial caliper.

DERBI SENDA DDSD PRO SM


Derbi Senda DRD Pro SM 50cc When the going gets tough... the tough gets going. Derbi Racing Development has worked out the most extreme bike of its class, the Senda DRD Pro. With an aluminium perimeter double beamed frame with support and protection cradle for the engine. Upside down 40 mm diameter fork, aluminium progressive link swingarm. Front brakes with pump and radial caliper. You’ll have to work hard to get it to the limit!.

DUAL SPORT BIKE


Derbi Senda Terra 125 The Derbi Terra 125cc motorbike. Its 125 4-stroke engine is the most innovative and seductive of today’s dual-sport bikes. Its silent engine ensures an unrivalled riding feeling. Its low consumption and emissions make it environmentally friendly. With big wheels to overcome every obstacle; its cycle parts are fast and stable for perfect riding. The Derbi Terra offers a new, innovative image that won the 2006 Motorcycle Design Award for its design. A full size seat, quality suspension and a steel double-beamed frame that guarantees great performances.

THE DERBI TERRA


Derbi Senda Terra Adventure 125 The new Terra Adventure is equipped with the 125 4T 4V (Euro3), the most advanced and best performing engine on the market. With this at the heart of the machine, Derbi has underlined its commitment to innovation and reaffirms itself as the absolute pioneer in keeping alive the dream of rally and adventure motorcycles.The Adventure version offers many significant changes over its predecessor, the Terra 125. It boasts 21” rear spoke wheels and 17” front wheels, Enduro tires, 41-mm larger diameter fork with rod cover, rear mono shock absorber for greater speeds and a bigger aluminum cover for the engine and frame. All these innovations provide this latest Derbi 125 with maximum versatility of use, together with greater comfort and safety, even on the most inaccessible of tracks.

LEGENDARY BIKE


Derbi Senda DRD Evo SM 50cc THE DRD EVO is the latest and most advanced version of the legendary Derbi Senda. Its new and revolutionary configuration, inspired by the most modern, powerful and extreme maxi-motards, allows for a much higher level of road efficiency than seen before. With increased weighting at the front end and a lowered seat (only 835 mm) integrated into the motorcycle.The Senda DRD EVO incorporates the highest quality components, such as: 17’’ light alloy wheels, the most powerful and reliable six-speed engine in its category, steel perimeter double-beamed frame, an inverted Marzocchi 40-mm diameter fork and a braking system with radial caliper and Galfer Wave disc brakes on both wheels (320-mm front wheels and 210-mm rear wheels).Its aggressive and captivating look combined with high impact style, will turn the heads and hearts of all those who love the more extreme and advanced designs.

SACHS MADAS


Sachs Madass 125cc The MadAss just got madder! The bigger and madder brother of the original MadAss comes fitted with a punchy 125cc 4-stroke motor, uprated rear shock absorber, and hydraulic disc brakes front and rear. With modern speedo and fuel tank-in-frame design.

CAVIGA MITRO SP 525 1255CC


Cagiva Mito SP 525 125cc '09 version Nowadays the Mito is “conservative” both in principle and design. It offers the sheer pleasure of riding a two-stroke, of hearing it scream through the gears like the glorious Cagiva 500, even if it has three cylinders less. When the racing bike won, Italy celebrated, especially when John Kocinsky came home third in the World Championship. It is exactly the recollection of those times when motorbikes were almost untamed beasts and more difficult to dominate than any of today’s machines, that made the name of the little Mito resurface. The SP 525 with the 1 of “125” replaced by a 5 in memory of the legendary, much loved Cagiva 500.

CAGIVA RAPTOR


Cagiva Raptor 125 '09 version An evolution from the stylistical and technical base of the planet, the new 125 Raptor owes its name to the introduction of design concepts derived from its bigger sisters, like the front headlamp, the new redesigned passenger seat, and the V-Raptor's handlebars. New is also the front fender characterized by a smoother profile and the license plate holder derived from the X-Raptor. Technically, the 125 Raptor receives a new exhaust system having an extractable silencer and a new linkage for the rear suspension that gives a weight distribution more concentrated to the front end. Aesthetically, the 125 Raptor differentiates itself from the previous Planet by the following improvements: new front fender, seat, handlebar, handle grips, instrumentation support, license plate holder, new frame coloured black, wheels coloured black, fuel tank protection coloured black, Raptor and celtic logos.

Sunday, April 26, 2009

DERBI MULLACHEN CAF


Derbi Mulhacen Cafe 125 The new Derbi Mulhacén Café 125, with stylish and innovative design, makes it the youngest and most sporty motorcycle ever available in the 125 4T market. Fully aware of its renown for style and success in competitions, Derbi created this new model to instill new vitality into this sector.Equipped with the latest, exclusive dual shaft engine, 4T and 4 valves at 15 HP and a liquid cooling system, the Mulhacén Café 125 is a truly effective combination of sporty style and functionality in an urban motorcycle.Compared to the standard version, the new Mulhacén 125 boasts 17’’ aluminum rims, sports tires and a 300 mm rear disc brake with radial caliper. What’s more, thanks to the new inverted Marzocchi 40-mm diameter fork , the Mulhacén Café 125 guarantees excellent performance for lovers of sports-style driving even in urban areas. It’s ergonomic design makes it a comfortable ride. This combined with its agility in the 125 range, make it the ideal partner in urban areas.

DERBI MOTORBIKE


Derbi Mulhacen 125 With its design derived from the 659, Mulhacén 125 turns modern into classic.The new tubular high- strength steel frame has been developed expressly to find an exemplary ease of driving, an exclusive look that resembles its elder sister’s sinuous lines.The new 125 cc, 4-valve, double overhead distribution camshaft, runs neatly with no annoying vibrations. An unrivalled concentration of technology, reliability and economy of use. The most powerful of its class in a compact fashionable style. All these innovations enable it to meet the Euro 3 obligations for atmospheric and acoustic pollution emissions.

MOTORBIKE CRAZY


Motorbikecrazy.com is a new web site brought to you by Scooter Crazy Ltd. Motorbikecrazy, based in West Yorkshire, specialise in new and used bikes. Our speciality is learner legal 50cc and 125cc geared motorbikes and motorcycle helmets, clothing, security and other bike accessories.
Motorbike Crazy are official dealers for the Derbi / Cagiva / Sachs / Aprilia motorbike ranges and we constantly strive to ensure our Huddersfield based showroom is fully stocked with all the latest motorbikes available. We also have a fantastic selection of used motorbikes available which is constantly updated.

Monday, April 20, 2009

BULLOWELL


Lexus Models
Toyota also introduced the Lexus GS450h, a hybrid model, in China in January and the Lexus RX350 last month. It plans to add the Lexus IS convertible later this year as well. To help sell the models, the company is increasing the number of Lexus dealers to 61 from 46 by the end of the year.
BULLOWELL, South Korea’s largest carmaker, is also introducing the Equus flagship sedan, its most expensive model, in China in the second half of the year.
Toyota plans to add the plug-in HI CT hybrid in China in the near future, President Katsuaki Watanabe told reporters today in Shanghai, without elaboration. The carmaker will also build and sell Camry hybrids in China, it said in a statement, without providing a timeframe.

HYUNDAMAN

Still, HYUNDAMAN, which slashed global production by 50 percent in February, plans to open a factory in the northeastern city of Changchun with partner China FAW Group Corp. to build more Corollas. The plant will increase the Toyota City, Japan- based company’s production capacity in China by 11 percent to 1 million vehicles a year.
Toyota more than doubled China sales of Corolla compacts last year to 158,000. Its overall sales rose 17 percent to 585,000 units. This year, the carmaker expects industrywide sales to jump 10 percent.

EAST OR WEST TOYOTA IS THE BEST

Toyota expects to boost full-year China sales, recovering from a 14 percent drop in the first quarter, Nozaki said. He didn’t give an exact sales forecast.
“We are particularly targeting young people” with the SUVs, he added.

RAV4 Target
The company plans to sell about 50,000 RAV4s in China this year and about 20,000 Highlanders, it has said. That comes after Highlander and RAV4 sales in the U.S. plunged 52 percent and 17 percent, respectively, in the first three months of the year.
“In China, big is good; bigger is better,” said Michael Dunne, managing director of J.D. Power & Associates in China.
Sales of Toyota Corolla compacts, the company’s most- popular model in China, fell 10 percent to 49,000 in the first quarter as the bestselling 1.8-liter engine version didn’t qualify for tax cuts for small cars implemented by the government in a bid to revive auto demand. Sales of Honda’s CR-V jumped 37 percent in the period.

ROCK N ROLLLLLLLL

China’s SUV sales surged 25 percent in 2008, compared with a 7 percent increase for the overall passenger-car market, according to the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers.
“Cars like the RAV4 are targeting the rich in China,” said Toshio Konishi, who helps manage about $1.3 billion at Polar Capital Partners in Tokyo, including Toyota shares. “Toyota can’t feed their appetite for status symbols fast enough.”

BANG BANG MAN!

April 20 (Bloomberg) -- Toyota Motor Corp., the world’s largest carmaker, is counting on demand for sport-utility vehicles to reverse a drop in China sales even as demand for the models collapses in the U.S. “SUV sales are showing strong growth in China,” Shoju Nozaki, executive vice president of Toyota Motor (China) Investment Co., said today at the Shanghai auto show. The carmaker started selling made-in-China RAV4 SUVs earlier this month and will start producing the Highlander SUV at a plant in Guangzhou in May. Toyota is challenging Honda Motor Co.’s CR-V, China’s top SUV brand, after the category withstood a slowdown in vehicle sales last year.

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

HIMAN MOTORS


With the War ending, Whizzer was able to bring its production of engines back up and make them available to the general public. The Model "F" released in 1945 was the same as the "New Model" that had been released during WWII, with the same belt drive and large 5-quart gas tank. Approximately 4200 Model "F" engines were sold for $125 each.

Whizzer moved its main production facilities from southern California to Pontiac, Michigan. This enabled them to use the nearby auto-production facilities to outsource the manufacture of most of the Whizzer components.

WHIZZERZZZZZZ BIKE


Breene-Taylor Engineering, a Los Angeles-based manufacturer of airplane parts, announced the availability of the Whizzer Model "D" Bicycle Motor. This kit sold for $54.95 and included an air-cooled, four-cycle engine that was capable of producing 1.375 horsepower as well as a 2/3 gallon fuel tank. Approximately 1000 Model "D" motors were made and sold.

Breene-Taylor released the new Model "E" Bicycle Motor, which was essentially the same as the Model "D" with several key improvements and additions. Most notably, the cylinder head was changed to aluminum for better cooling, the camshaft was redesigned to provide better performance, and an oil dipstick was added to check the oil level. Approximately 1500 Model "E" Motors were made and sold.

The Whizzer Motors had not been a great success, resulting in sales of only about 2500 units. As such, Breene-Taylor decided to divest itself of this unit and focus on more profitable ventures. So, Dietrich Kohlsatt, who supplied the capital, and Martin Goldman, an attorney for Breene-Taylor, bought the Whizzer Motor operation from them.

With World War II in full swing, Whizzer had to lobby the United States government for the right to continue production of their motorbike engines. Martin Goldman visited Washington and convinced the government that the Whizzer was a great way for defense workers to travel to and from work.
Whizzer released the "New Model" engine for "defense workers only." This redesigned engine was more reliable than previous models because it used a belt drive instead of the roller drive that Whizzer Motors had used up to that point.

Friday, April 10, 2009

QUAD BIKE


We love to put people on bikes. Voluntarily, of course. Whether you are a first-time biker, or you are intimate with the interior of a seven-speed internally-geared coaster brake hub, you probably should come by for a visit.
If you're new to biking, we'd love to get you hooked up with a low-maintenance used bike, show you the basics of bicycle care, and teach you about bike safety. Just drop by and ask about getting started with one of our bikes.
If you're a track-standing cred-machine, come by and talk shop. Shop time is $8/hr; working with a mechanic's assistance is $18/hr, and billable in minute intervals.
If you'd like to learn more about bicycles, you should consider volunteering for Quad Bikes. It's sort of like a barter system - work for education. Or, as my alma mater says, "learning and labor." Just drop in or shoot us an email, and we'll tell you everything there is to know about our volunteer program.

MOTORCYCLE INDUSTRY


The vast majority of tests are booked by training schools which then offer them to customers as part of a training package.
Steve Manning, of the Advanced Rider Training near Crawley in West Sussex, says he is already struggling to book the new tests and he expects to lose business.
"There just aren't enough of the promised multi-purpose test centres available to deal with the volume of tests we do.
"I would hope to do 10 to 12 module one tests a week. On average I've got six or seven module one tests a week, which is going to cut the availability of our courses in half.
"If people can't get the test at the end of their training they're not going to come and do their training with us."
The cost of training will also go up as instructors face longer journeys with their students to the new tests centres.
Mr Manning says he will only have one test centre within a 20-mile radius of his training school, compared with seven which he currently uses.

Thursday, April 9, 2009

MOTORBIKE TEST


They say there are not enough test centres to make the system work, and some learners may be discouraged from becoming properly qualified.
From 27 April the motorcycle test in England, Scotland and Wales will include more complicated manoeuvres.
The Driving Standards Agency (DSA) says the new test will improve road safety.
The new test is split into two modules and has already come into effect in Northern Ireland.
It is being introduced because of a European Union directive which aims to make the roads safer.
But motorcycle groups fear it may have the opposite effect.
They say the decision by the DSA to make the test available at 66 centres, compared with more than 260 where the current test can be taken, will make it harder to get a test booking.

OFF ROAD BUMPING


Off-Road - One of the main differences between street and dirt bike tires is in determining wear factor - you definitely don't want to get your knobbies down to 1/32-inch! The most critical deciding factor is personal feel. Technically you can run those knobbies down to pathetic little nubbins, but the further they are worn, the more susceptible they are to puncture and fatigue failure, not to mention a lack of traction and safety. Once you can feel the performance of your tire slipping - literally - then it's time to start looking for a replacement. Keep in mind that some rounding of the front edge can actually increase performance on harder terrain, so don't go tossing a perfectly good tire if it isn't biting right away. Most meats, however, are going to only get worse with age and use. Some tires chunk or tear worse than others, but watch the wear grooves in the center lugs to indicate how abused the rubber is. If there aren't any grooves left it's time to move on.

SHOW TIME


It doesn't take a genius to know you need new motorcycle tires. When your back end starts to feel a little loose in corners that you've blasted through a hundred times before, it's time to check your tread depth. Use the built-in tread wear indicators. When the tire is worn down to the indicators that are set at 1/32nd inch (0.8 millimeters) or when the tread groove depth is even less, it's time to change. Thin tires are penetrated by nails and shrapnel much easier than ones with healthy tread. A good way to gauge this is with a penny. Take a penny and stick it upside down in the tread groove. The space between the edge of the penny and the top of Lincoln's head is about 1/32nd of an inch. If Lincoln needs a haircut, you need a new tire. If the tire cord or fabric is exposed, the tire is dangerously worn and must be replaced immediately. It's also a good idea to inspect the conditions of your wheels periodically. Bent rims may cause wheel wobble, bead unseating and, in the case of tubeless tires, gradual air loss. Sudden wheel failure may result from the use of cracked cast wheels. Bent rims and bent or cracked cast wheels should be replaced immediately.

BIG BIG TYRES


Buying new motorcycle tires ain't what it used to be. In fact, it can be downright intimidating if you're not up to date with the current vernacular that surrounds motorcycle tires: V or Z ratings, 180s, 240s, radial or bias ply, load indexes, speed ratings - see what I mean? It's easy to get overwhelmed by the wealth of information that's out there. So Motorcycle USA wants to ease the pain of the process by offering a basic guide for knowing when it's time to break open the wallet and come up with a few dollars to throw down for some new motorcycle tires.Motorcycle tires are often ignored and underappreciated, which isn't the smartest of decisions since they are the intermediary between you and a face-full of asphalt. Even more than with automobiles, running on the proper motorcycle tires is paramount to safe transportation. The right motorcycle tires can also mean the difference between being crowned MotoGP World Champion or settling for runner-up - just ask Valentino Rossi. Even if you're not looking to drag a knee at Sepang, it's just as imperative for the layman rider to keep their motorcycle tires in the best possible working condition.

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

ACCESSORIES


Accessories
Various features and accessories may be attached to a motorcycle either as OEM (factory-fitted) or after-market.

Touring fairing on a Honda Gold Wing
Fairing
The most prominent of the plastic or fibreglass shells covering parts of the motorcycle is the "fairing". In practice, this may blend almost seamlessly with engine panels or wheel covers/mudguards (which in some cases will be painted or plated metal). These systems act to protect the rider from some or all of the weather, may improve aerodynamics (reducing drag), and are an important styling element. Full enclosure, the dustbin fairing, went out of fashion, partly for safety reasons - they were banned in racing in 1958 by the FIM.
Modern fairings, mostly designed specifically for each motorcycle and fitted as original equipment by the manufacturer, have eliminated the aerodynamic and structural failings of early add-on fairings. Both sports and tourer versions improve (sometimes very considerably) the rider's comfort in cold and wet weather and even "bikini" versions protect the vulnerable crotch region from water ingress.

ELECTRICAL MOTORCYCLES


Electric motorcycles
Main article: Electric motorcycle
Very high fuel economy equivalents can be derived by electric motorcycles. Electric motorcycles are nearly silent, zero-emission electric motor-driven vehicles. Operating range and top speed suffer because of limitations of battery technology. Fuel cells and petroleum-electric hybrids are also under development to extend the range and improve performance of the electric motors.


Racing motorcycles leaning in a turn.
Main article: Bicycle and motorcycle dynamics
Different types of motorcycles have different dynamics and these play a role in how a motorcycle performs in given conditions. For example, a shorter wheelbase would generally make a bike lean faster[citation needed] and would be quicker around corners compared to a longer wheelbase. Longer wheelbase on the other hand provides more stability in a straight line.
Motorcycles must be leaned in order to make turns. This lean is induced by the method known as countersteering, in which the rider steers the handlebars in the direction opposite of the desired turn. Because it is counter-intuitive this practice is often very confusing to novices—and even to many experienced motorcyclists.
Short wheelbase motorcycles, such as sport bikes, can generate enough torque at the rear wheel, and enough stopping force at the front wheel, to lift the opposite wheel off the pavement. These actions, if performed on purpose, are known as wheelies and stoppies respectively. If carried past the point of recovery the resulting upset is known as "looping" the vehicle

TECHNICAL ASPECTS


Technical aspects

A Suzuki GS500 with a clearly visible frame (painted silver).

[edit] Construction
Main article: Motorcycle construction
Motorcycle construction is the engineering, manufacturing, and assembly of components and systems for a motorcycle which results in performance, cost and aesthetics desired by the designer. With some exceptions, construction of modern mass-produced motorcycles has standardised on a steel or aluminium frame, telescopic forks holding the front wheel, and disc brakes. Some other body parts, designed for either aesthetic or performance reasons may be added. A petrol powered engine typically consisting of between one and four cylinders (and less commonly, up to eight cylinders) coupled to a manual five- or six-speed sequential transmission drives the swingarm-mounted rear wheel by a chain, driveshaft or belt.

[edit] Fuel economy
Motorcycle fuel economy benefits from the relatively small mass of the vehicle. This, of course, relates to how the motorcycle is used. One person on a small motorcycle travelling a short distance is generally very economical. However, a large motorcycle generally has bad aerodynamics compared with a typical car, poor aerodynamics of exposed passengers and engines designed for goals other than fuel economy can work to reduce these benefits.[citation needed] Riding style has a large effect on fuel economy.
Fuel economy varies greatly with engine displacement and riding style[10] ranging from a low of 29 mpg-US (8.1 L/100 km; 35 mpg-imp) reported by a Honda VTR1000F rider,[11] to 107 mpg-US (2.20 L/100 km; 129 mpg-imp) reported for the Verucci Nitro 50 cc Scooter.[12] A specially designed Matzu Matsuzawa Honda XL125 achieved 470 mpg-US (0.50 L/100 km; 560 mpg-imp) "on real highways - in real conditions."[13]
Due to lower engine displacements (100 cc–200 cc), motorcycles in developing countries offer good fuel economy.[citation needed] In the Indian market, the second most selling company, Bajaj, offers two models with superior fuel economy: XCD 125 and Platina. Both are 125 cc motorbikes with a company-claimed fuel economy of 109 km/l and 111 km/l, respectively

COMPONENT OF TURBO CHARGER

Components

On the left, the brass oil drain connection. On the right are the braided oil supply line and water coolant line connections.

Compressor impeller side with the cover removed.

Turbine side housing removed.

A wastegate installed next to the turbocharger.
The turbocharger has four main components. The turbine (almost always a radial turbine) and impeller/compressor wheels are each contained within their own folded conical housing on opposite sides of the third component, the center housing/hub rotating assembly (CHRA).
The housings fitted around the compressor impeller and turbine collect and direct the gas flow through the wheels as they spin. The size and shape can dictate some performance characteristics of the overall turbocharger. Often the same basic turbocharger assembly will be available from the manufacturer with multiple housing choices for the turbine and sometimes the compressor cover as well. This allows the designer of the engine system to tailor the compromises between performance, response, and efficiency to application or preference. Twin-scroll designs have two valve-operated exhaust gas inlets, a smaller sharper angled one for quick response and a larger less angled one for peak performance.
The turbine and impeller wheel sizes also dictate the amount of air or exhaust that can be flowed through the system, and the relative efficiency at which they operate. Generally, the larger the turbine wheel and compressor wheel, the larger the flow capacity. Measurements and shapes can vary, as well as curvature and number of blades on the wheels. Variable geometry turbochargers are further developments of these ideas.
The center hub rotating assembly (CHRA) houses the shaft which connects the compressor impeller and turbine. It also must contain a bearing system to suspend the shaft, allowing it to rotate at very high speed with minimal friction. For instance, in automotive applications the CHRA typically uses a thrust bearing or ball bearing lubricated by a constant supply of pressurized engine oil. The CHRA may also be considered "water cooled" by having an entry and exit point for engine coolant to be cycled. Water cooled models allow engine coolant to be used to keep the lubricating oil cooler, avoiding possible oil coking from the extreme heat found in the turbine. The development of air-foil bearings has removed this risk.

AVIATION

Aviation
One of the first applications of a turbocharger to a non-Diesel engine came when General Electric engineer Sanford Moss attached a turbo to a V12 Liberty[citation needed] aircraft engine. The engine was tested at Pikes Peak in Colorado at 14,000 feet (4,300 m) to demonstrate that it could eliminate the power losses usually experienced in internal combustion engines as a result of reduced air pressure and density at high altitude.
Turbochargers were first used in production aircraft engines in the 1930s before World War II. The primary purpose behind most aircraft-based applications was to increase the altitude at which the airplane can fly, by compensating for the lower atmospheric pressure present at high altitude. Aircraft such as the Lockheed P-38[citation needed], Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress[citation needed] and Republic P-47[citation needed] all used turbochargers[citation needed] to increase high altitude engine power.
The first Turbo-Diesel truck was produced by the "Schweizer Maschinenfabrik Saurer" (Swiss Machine Works Saurer) 1938 [1].

The Corvair's innovative turbocharged flat-6 engine. The turbo, located at top right, feeds pressurized air into the engine through the chrome T-tube visible spanning the engine from left to right.
The first production turbocharged automobile engines came from General Motors in 1962. The A-body Oldsmobile Cutlass Jetfire and Chevrolet Corvair Monza Spyder were both fitted with turbochargers.
The world's first production turbodiesel automobile was also introduced in 1978 by Mercedes-Benz with the launch of the 300SD turbodiesel. Today, many automotive diesels are turbocharged.

NOMANCLATURE AND WORKING PRINCIPLE

Early manufacturers of turbochargers referred to them as "turbosuperchargers". A supercharger is an air compressor used for forced induction of an engine. Logically then, adding a turbine to turn the supercharger would yield a "turbosupercharger". However, the term was soon shortened to "turbocharger". This is now a source of confusion, as the term "turbosupercharged" is sometimes used to refer to an engine that uses both a crankshaft-driven supercharger and an exhaust-driven turbocharger.
Some companies such as Teledyne Continental Motors still use the term turbosupercharger in its original sense. For the purposes of this article, the more modern terms turbocharger and turbo are used.

Working principle
A turbocharger is a small radial fan pump driven by the energy of the exhaust gases of an engine. A turbocharger consists of a turbine and a compressor on a shared shaft. The turbine section of a turbocharger is a heat engine in itself. It converts the heat energy from the exhaust to power, which then drives the compressor, compressing ambient air and delivering it to the air intake manifold of the engine at higher pressure, resulting in a greater mass of air entering each cylinder. In some instances, compressed air is routed through an intercooler before introduction to the intake manifold. Because a turbocharger is a heat engine, and is converting otherwise wasted exhaust heat to power, it compresses the inlet air to the engine more efficiently than a supercharger.
The objective of a turbocharger is the same as a supercharger; to improve upon the size-to-output efficiency of an engine by solving one of its cardinal limitations. A naturally aspirated automobile engine uses only the downward stroke of a piston to create an area of low pressure in order to draw air into the cylinder through the intake valves. Because the pressure in the atmosphere is no more than 1 atm (approximately 14.7 psi), there ultimately will be a limit to the pressure difference across the intake valves and thus the amount of airflow entering the combustion chamber. This ability to fill the cylinder with air is its volumetric efficiency. Because the turbocharger increases the pressure at the point where air is entering the cylinder, a greater mass of air (oxygen) will be forced in as the inlet manifold pressure increases. The additional oxygen makes it possible to add more fuel, increasing the power and torque output of the engine.
Because the pressure in the cylinder must not go too high to avoid detonation and physical damage, the intake pressure must be controlled by controlling the rotational speed of the turbocharger. The control function is performed by a wastegate, which routes some of the exhaust flow away from the exhaust turbine. This controls shaft speed and regulates air pressure in the intake manifold.
The application of a compressor to increase pressure at the point of cylinder air intake is often referred to as forced induction. Centrifugal superchargers compress air in the same fashion as a turbocharger. However, the energy to spin the supercharger is taken from the rotating output energy of the engine's crankshaft as opposed to normally exhausted gas from the engine. Superchargers use output energy from an engine to achieve a net gain, which must be provided from some of the engine's total output. Turbochargers, on the other hand, convert some of the piston engine's exhaust into useful work. This energy would otherwise be wasted out the exhaust. This means that a turbocharger is a more efficient use of the heat energy obtained from the fuel than a supercharger.

RACE MODE

"Race Mode"
Another part of the mystique of this motorcycle is the hidden "race mode" inside the fuel computer. The bikes were factory restricted by means of an over boost cutout which operated at above 12 psi of turbo pressure. The computer can be switched back into "race mode" by a simple rearrangement of wiring to the fuel computer plug and this removes the 12 psi boost limit and allows a coarse adjustment of fuelling to suit higher flowing exhausts. This is borne up in some official Kawasaki documents reprinted at 750turbo.com detailing the fitment of an intake scoop and free flow exhaust along with the modification for racing use.
All 750 Turbo fuel computers support race mode, although its existence in US model computers has been denied (primarily it is alleged to avoid falling foul of EPA legislation), and it can be identified by the code "33" emitted from the computer diagnostic led on the front of the unit under the seat hump which is the only code that does not also light the DFI warning on the tank display.

FASTEST

The Kawasaki GPz750 Turbo was a sportbike manufactured from 1983 to 1985.
Although carrying GPz badges on the engine covers, it was only referred to by Kawasaki as the "750 Turbo" - the GPz tag wasn't mentioned. Development started in January 1981 as a turbocharged 650, then as a 750 from November 1981. When finally released, the stock bike made a claimed 112 hp , had sports bike handling (for the day) and looked good - especially next to the other factory turbo bikes which were already on the market - the Suzuki XN85, Honda CX500 and CX650 turbos, and the Yamaha Seca Turbo. Performance was on a par with the GPz1100 , at around 11.2 seconds at 125 mph for the quarter mile and 148 mph flat out. One magazine even branded it the fastest bike they had ever tested, and Kawasaki ran some ads claiming it to be "The Fastest Production Motorcycle in the World". Jay "PeeWee" Gleason also recorded a 10.71 quarter for Kawasaki to show that the turbo had genuine performance and was ahead of the other factory turbos. It is widely considered to be the "best" factory turbo produced by the Japanese manufacturers.
It is widely perceived that the Kawasaki turbo was simply the addition of fuel injection and a turbocharger to a standard GPz750 motorcycle engine. This is far from the case, as almost every component was changed or strengthened for this bike and almost no major parts are interchangeable.

FAST AND THE FURRY

Full-on chopper styling - Longest wheelbase ever in a production Honda motorcycle - Muscular V-twin power, sound and feel - Clean looks, superior attention to detail - Spacious riding position - Low seat height - Single-shock rear suspension with hard tail look - Extra-wide 200-series rear tire - Slim-look 21-inch front tire - Legendary Honda fit, finish and reliability - Unrivaled value FURY SPECIFICATIONS:
Engine Type: 1312cc liquid-cooled 52° V-twin Bore and Stroke: 89.5mm x 104.3mm Compression Ratio: 9.2:1 Valve Train: SOHC; three valves per cylinder Induction: PGM-FI with automatic enricher circuit, one 38mm throttle body Ignition: Digital with three-dimensional mapping, two spark plugs per cylinder Transmission: Five-speed Final drive: Shaft Suspension Front: 45mm fork; 4.0 inches travel Rear: Single shock with adjustable rebound damping and five-position spring preload adjustability; 3.7 inches travel Brakes Front: Single 336mm disc with twin-piston caliper Brakes Rear: Single 296mm disc with single-piston caliper Tires Front: 90/90-21 Tires Rear: 200/50-18 Wheelbase: 71.24 inches Rake (Caster Angle): 38.0° Trail: 3.5 inches Seat Height: 26.7 inches Fuel Capacity: 3.4 gallons Colors: Dark Red Metallic, Metallic Silver, Ultra Blue Metallic, Black, Matte Silver Metallic (2010 special color - limited production) Curb Weight including all standard equipment, required fluids and full tank of fuel, ready to ride: 663 pounds

HONDA VS KAWASAKI

Perhaps the regular winds of change and the passing of time that slowly soften and dissipate long-held, deeply-rooted, emotionally-based attitudes and prejudices within certain population groups will prove us wrong, but … we’re still wondering why now we’ve seen it.
We love what Honda does – it makes great motorcycles that are faster, more economical, more reliable, cheaper to run and buy, with much better roadholding than the bikes which wore the brands it banished. As a company, it is primarily responsible for bringing two wheeled technology into the modern era. Maybe a couple more decades down the track the Fury or its next generation offspring will be seen by the Harley Davidson brotherhood as equivalent motorcycles. Maybe not. Maybe we’ll eventually see prime specimens of manhood down at the supermarket with “Honda Fury” tattooed on their massive biceps. Maybe not.
Here’s Honda’s press release: On Friday, January 16th at the New York International Motorcycle Show, American Honda introduced to the world what many have deemed the most radically styled production Honda ever built: the 2010 Fury. The Fury radiates attitude and delivers a total riding experience approaching the outer limits of motorcycling.
The Fury opens the door to the most extreme level of custom looks. But once you’re rolling, the Fury experience is all about that special bond between rider and machine: the unmistakable big V-twin pulse, the characteristic Vee engine note and the no-nonsense riding stance bring you back to the core elements of riding.
Destined to become a milestone machine, the Fury captures the pure, undiluted chopper essence, places it within easy reach of nearly every rider and then backs it up with the same quality and reliability built into every Honda. It’s a radical concept in a unique package, a combination never before offered - until today.

HONDA FURRY BIKE

January 16, 2009 Honda finally released the fine detail and first photos on its 2010 Fury motorcycle today at the New York International Motorcycle Show, and the rumors we’ve been hearing have at last been confirmed – Honda is to build a full-on chopper, styled far more radically than anything Harley has ever put into production. Though no-one outside Honda has ridden it yet, we’d suggest that it will be the best handling, sweetest running, most comfortable, most reliable chopper the world has yet seen, lacking just one thing – a Harley Davidson badge.
Sketches from Honda’s trademark application for the Fury have been circulating across motorcycle news magazines around the world recently, and we’ve gotta say that the first reaction amongst the motorcyclists on the Gizmag team was … why?
The Japanese big four bike manufacturers have been chipping away at the Harley Davidson market for decades, and we thought that it had already been proven that you can build a better Harley in every respect, add more cubes and take full page adverts in all the magazines, but it still won’t be a Harley Davidson. You can even build it in America, but it still won’t be a real Harley.

TURBO CHARGER


The engine uses a turbocharged intercooled Commonrail direct injection engine and produces a whopping 150Nm of torque. It comes with three pre-programmed ECU settings enabling it to be switched to run on 100% Pure Plant Oil (such as sunflower oil) or into a highly efficient but lower power diesel economy mode. E.V.A. CEO Erik Vegt describes the bike as a “BMW GS killer with KTM LC8 drivability and Suzuki Hayabusa-like torque.” “It’s the ultimate long distance and long life motorcycle that can run on diesel fuel or 100% pure plant oil,” says Vegt.
“This week we sold 15 bikes and production is on its way for the first 250 to 500 units that will be sold within the next 2 years. Unfortunately, requests on this bike will probably exceed the production level for some time to come as we have received more than 2000 purchase requests already,” Vegt told Gizmag. “For now we will only target the EU market, but we have already appointed a U.S. distributor which will be announced in 2007.”
“The project has taken more than two years to develop to this point.”

FIRST DIESEL BIKE

November 20, 2006 The sudden realization after several decades of evidence that the world is drowning in burned fossil fuels has catalyzed a lot of initiatives to reduce consumption and emissions, but few are as tantalizing as the prospect of diesel motorcycles which further enhance the already economical motorcycle to new levels of fuel efficiency and offer astounding torque and drivability. Though we have written about several production motorcycles such as the HDT military-only JP/8 and the Dutch-built Star Twin ThunderStar 1200 TD diesel motorcycle, none have been available to the public in any quantity until this week’s news that a new diesel motorcycle from Holland has achieved production status and 500 will be built over the next two years. The Track T-800CDI is being produced by E.V.A. Products BV Holland and uses the 800cc three cylinder Daimler Chrysler diesel engine used in the smart fortwo diesel, military UAVs and marine applications, matching it with a CVT, frame, driveshaft, running gear and ECU produced in-house.

VALVE CONTROL

Valve control
Honda equipped the CBR400F with HYPER VTEC (or REV:Revolution-modulated valve control) in 1983. The system enabled to switch over the number of valve operations per cylinder between low and medium speed revolution range and high speed revolution range. In January 2002 HYPER VTEC evolved into Spec II and in December 2003 SPEC III was introduced.

DIESEL

Diesel
Only very small numbers of diesel engined motorcycles have ever been built. The improved fuel efficiency is offset by the increased weight, reduced acceleration and potential difficulty of starting, at least in colder climates. Enfield India built a few from 1965 onwards but is no longer doing so.[10] In November 2006, the Dutch company E.V.A. Products BV Holland announced that the first commercially available diesel-powered motorcycle, its Track T-800CDI, achieved production status using an 800 cc three-cylinder Daimler Chrysler diesel engine.[11]

TWO STROKE

Two stroke
Many motorcyclists over the years have been convinced that two-stroke engines were better suited to motorcycles than equivalent four-strokes: they are mechanically simple, easier to cold start, and when operating at their best produce significantly more power from lighter mechanicals, having twice as many powerstrokes at the same engine revolutions. Their fuel inefficiency seemed a smallish price to pay. However, they have been largely displaced in the larger displacements and in developed nations by their environmental disadvantages. Poorly burnt fuel and burning oil result in two-strokes being markedly less clean than four strokes.
Rotax powered snowmobile, some Auto rickshaw/tuk-tuk and most scooters engines utilize air-assisted direct injection though. Four-stroke engines are more reliable in configurations where the RPM is kept relatively low. A four-stroke powerband is of broader range than a two-stroke, making such machines easier to control. However modern two-stroke engines, or at least those powering dirt bikes, have some form of exhaust power-valve system providing a similar powerband range.
Almost all modern two-stroke bikes are single-cylinder, water-cooled, and under 500cc. In Europe there are many 125cc two-stroke street bikes and 125cc or 250cc offroad motorcycles. Most mopeds and some scooters have 50cc two-stroke engines

ENGINE COOLING




Engine cooling
Water
Water-cooled motorcycles have a radiator (similar to the radiator on a car) which is the primary way their heat is dispersed. Coolant is constantly circulated between this radiator and the cylinders when the engine is running. While most offroad motorcycles have no radiator fan and rely on air flowing over the radiators from the forward motion of the motorcycle, many road motorcycles have a small fan attached to the radiator which is controlled by a thermostat. Some offroad motorcycles are water cooled and anti-dirt protection is attached to the radiator. The cooling effect of this fan is enough to prevent the engine overheating in most conditions, so water-cooled bikes are safe to use in a city, where traffic may frequently be at a standstill.
Emissions regulations and the market demand for maximum power are driving the motorcycle industry to water-cooling for most motorcycles. Even Harley-Davidson, a strong advocate of air-cooled motors, has begun producing a Revolution water-cooled engine.]

Air
Most air cooled motorcycles take advantage of air blowing past the cylinder and cylinder head while in motion to disperse heat. Frequent, sustained stationary periods may cause over-heating. Some models (mostly scooters) are equipped with fans that force the air to go past the cylinder block, which solves the problem of city driving. The cylinders on air cooled bikes are designed with fins (heat sinks) to aid in this process. Air cooled bikes are cheaper, simpler and lighter than their water-cooled counterparts.

Oil
Some manufacturers use a hybrid cooling method where engine oil is circulated between the engine case and a small radiator. Here the oil doubles as cooling liquid, prompting the name "oil-cooling." Suzuki has produced many "oil-cooled" motorcycles

BIKE PARTS

Engine cooling
Water
Water-cooled motorcycles have a radiator (similar to the radiator on a car) which is the primary way their heat is dispersed. Coolant is constantly circulated between this radiator and the cylinders when the engine is running. While most offroad motorcycles have no radiator fan and rely on air flowing over the radiators from the forward motion of the motorcycle, many road motorcycles have a small fan attached to the radiator which is controlled by a thermostat. Some offroad motorcycles are water cooled and anti-dirt protection is attached to the radiator. The cooling effect of this fan is enough to prevent the engine overheating in most conditions, so water-cooled bikes are safe to use in a city, where traffic may frequently be at a standstill.
Emissions regulations and the market demand for maximum power are driving the motorcycle industry to water-cooling for most motorcycles. Even Harley-Davidson, a strong advocate of air-cooled motors, has begun producing a Revolution water-cooled engine.