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Racing my 650 hot street bike
- leitz
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- kawi810
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original owner of a 1984 gpz 750
1985 turbo 750 stock, being restored.
1984 gpz 750 with 810 cc wiesco's megacycle cams(471-10) 34 mm flatslides v&h pipe ported head dyna ignition. bottom end, crank case from turbo 750 and sprockets.
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- leitz
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- KZB2 650
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kawi810 wrote: i had to slot my sprockets for my megacycle cams it said warning" will not drop in on stock marks"
Won't be doing it for a while but did you use a dremel for the slots..... seems like you get em off by .005 awful easy and have a wobble (tight and loose spot)?? Have read that folks have been doing it this way though for quite q while.....
Can't wait to see your improved lap times Leitz.
1978 KZ650 b-2
700cc Wiseco kit 10 to 1.
1980 KZ750 cam, ape springs, stock clutch/ Barnett springs.
Vance and Hines Header w/ comp baffle and Ape pods, Dyna S and green coils, copper wires.
29MM smooth bores W/ 17.5 pilots, 0-6s and 117.5 main
16/42 gearing X ring chain and alum rear JT sprocket.
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- leitz
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- turboguzzi
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Leitz,
leave alone stock timing, you want a better performing engine than stock no?
105-105 is a common good setup for kz motors.
dont have time to do the cam slotting or too lazy? run whatever you have there but please dont complain to us if the valves kiss the piston or each other later to me 116 in-108ex sounds like an odd combination that will kill midrange
we are only trying to help
have great weekend!
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- leitz
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kawi810 wrote:
i had to slot my sprockets for my megacycle cams it said warning" will not drop in on stock marks"
Thanks all for help!!
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- kawi810
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original owner of a 1984 gpz 750
1985 turbo 750 stock, being restored.
1984 gpz 750 with 810 cc wiesco's megacycle cams(471-10) 34 mm flatslides v&h pipe ported head dyna ignition. bottom end, crank case from turbo 750 and sprockets.
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- kawi810
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- Posts: 230
- Thank you received: 11
original owner of a 1984 gpz 750
1985 turbo 750 stock, being restored.
1984 gpz 750 with 810 cc wiesco's megacycle cams(471-10) 34 mm flatslides v&h pipe ported head dyna ignition. bottom end, crank case from turbo 750 and sprockets.
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- kawi810
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- Posts: 230
- Thank you received: 11
original owner of a 1984 gpz 750
1985 turbo 750 stock, being restored.
1984 gpz 750 with 810 cc wiesco's megacycle cams(471-10) 34 mm flatslides v&h pipe ported head dyna ignition. bottom end, crank case from turbo 750 and sprockets.
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- leitz
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Andrews seller has wrote me this info:
"You may best use 105-107 intake but I think 110 is too much. They may time them that late because of piston to valve. You have to have at least 1.5MM clearance between intake and flycut on the piston dome. You will have to machine the cam sprockets to adjust the timing."
May be 105 deggrees dangerous for stock pistons? i have no time now for opening the engine for checking
I am searching a machine shop to get the sprockets slotted
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- turboguzzi
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best is by opening the motor and putting Plasticine in the valve pockets, closing the motor and turning the motor over, then checking how much gap you have
if your valve springs are stock, you might be able to do it by pressing on the bucket and see how much more they can move till they touch the piston, not easy, usually its done by installing a weaker spring. see page 11 here
www.lunadesign.org/images/gixxer/Slabside-Hop-Up-Manual.pdf
there's a third method of using a 1.6mm solder wire, pushing it all the way down to the edge of the valve pocket, turning the engine and pulling the wire. if it comes out at the point where the valve and piston are closest, the you are fine, again not that easy or reliable check.
i believe that if you didnt increase compression youll be fine with an extra mm of lift, but cant be sure 100% all cams are different.
my gpz didnt need machining the pockets for more clearance as it has a wiseco kit with deep pocekts, but my CB500/4 needed machining whit high lift cam on stock pistons, really hard to say.
honestly was sure you knew that this is an important check with performance cams,
if i was you, would stay clam, run your current cams and do the check properly opening the motor after your next race.
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