Go Back   Two Wheel Fix > In the Garage or Shop > Mechanical or Tech

 
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Prev Previous Post   Next Post Next
Old 06-14-2013, 03:02 AM   #1
Porkchop
125GP Champion
 
Porkchop's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2008
Location: Worthington, OH
Moto: Empty Garage
Posts: 3,418
Default Baffles and back-pressure

So some of you may remember seeing the pics of my bike, and if you didn't the bike was purchased used through a dealer. The bike was already fitted with Leo Vince SBK pipes, of which were completely unbaffled. For such a small motor, the thing is absurd sounding and often get complements from the 1098/1198/1199 riding brethren at my local D.O.C. for sounding louder/better than their bikes.

Fast forward a bit, now that the weather is really nice almost all day long I commute on the thing everyday. I've only put 14 miles on my car since June 1. The semi-problem I am having is that I'm a night owl. I come home really late from hanging with my brother/friends, like between 2 and 4am, and I am worried about bothering the neighbors. Most often I cut the ignition as I hit my street and coast into the driveway. I recently ran across the Leo Vince box and found the original baffles... or what I thought was the original baffles. I think from what I see in the illustrations the baffle was an endcap with about 3-4 inches of tube sticking back. All I have are the baffle caps. Upon further inspection, I think the original owner pulled out the original baffles and cut the tube off the end of the caps, most likely looking for a sound increase. When he didn't get it, I think he said fuck it and pulled the caps off completely.

I was intrigued to hear what it would sound like with even just the caps installed. Thank god the Leos have an easy screw in baffle caps. So I did and tested it in the garage, and even at idle, me and my roommate concluded it was a noticeable difference in not only overall volume, but the booming bass. I left to meet some friends for a movie this evening and there was some differences. Accelerating you still get great sound, but on the highway it was most noticeable the noise difference. Even to the point that I noticed wind blast and front tire noise much more now. Gone is the booming sound of going through underpasses too...

But past the noise... something happened. The bike's mid-range torque has jumped a surprising amount. The bike really had a dead spot in the mid-range between where the chuggy v-twin torque ends and the thing starts to really rev out and make peak horsepower. It's a window of about 2k rpm and it bugs the shit out of me. Even to the point that I have been chomping at the bit recently about upgrading and moving to the M1100EVO or Streetfighter 848 for a little more oomph. But this is just so confusing. I even stopped for a minute to make sure I wasn't making things up in my head and did a few pulls through all the gears... no dead spot. And throttle response is vastly improved too. Deceleration on/off throttle moves used to be like a light switch and could be herky jerky if you weren't super precise. Smooth...

So I started thinking, how much does a little change in back pressure really effect a motor? I mean this isn't even the WHOLE baffle, just the endcap. How many people are riding aftermarket pipes for the sound aspect that are actually hurting performance? Does anybody know the science or mechanics behind this? It's just really astounding.
__________________
*Coming soon?
2010 Ducati Monster 696 - Sold
1984 Honda VF500F - Sold
1999 Yamaha R6 - Sold
Porkchop is offline   Reply With Quote
 

Bookmarks


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 12:01 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions Inc.