shrek,
There are millions of V4 sportbike engines.
And, of course, there's also the V5's:
15,2000 rpm! WowMine is an NC30 - revs to 15,2000 rpm and is lovely. A real little diamond.
A V8 has been made in Australia for motorcycles from straight 4s010010011010 wrote:15,2000 rpm! WowMine is an NC30 - revs to 15,2000 rpm and is lovely. A real little diamond.
would there be anybenifits of making a 1200cc v8 out of two 600ccc straight 4's?
or would a normal straight 4 1200cc engine be more powerful
CoolA V8 has been made in Australia for motorcycles from straight 4s
Drysdale http://home.mira.net/~iwd/
I think there is another one also in Australia
none of those(except for maybe emissions) is ever a problem for me in any of my rotary build & tunes... but this is not the thread for that discussionflynfrog wrote:the fuel consumption, or the egts. or the emissions or the rebuild times?ISLAMATRON wrote:ahhhh the beauties of the rotary
Heck they make a ton of them in the two stroke version, OMC/Johnson/Evinrude/Yamaha and even Honda does in a 4 stroke version, all for boats.riff_raff wrote:shrek,
There are millions of V4 sportbike engines.
And, of course, there's also the V5's:
I believe that is the correct answer. Let's face it, almost every automotive 4 cylinder engine is designed for small cars or light use. You're not going to see one in a Lincoln, or Bugatti. So since the design of the 4 cylinder engine is to be optimized for a small car, it will also have to be as cheap as possible.flynfrog wrote:But to answer the question an I4 is a much better configuration for a 4 cyl engine. Its much less complex and cheaper to build. Its most of the time easier to package.
Can someone please xplain the above, was a Ferrari "flat-12" of the 70s not just a 180 degree V-12?Terrible3 wrote: A flat 4 and a 180* v 4 are completely different. The crank shaft design being the main difference.
Apparently it was Flat-V engines.xpensive wrote:Can someone please xplain the above, was a Ferrari "flat-12" of the 70s not just a 180 degree V-12?Terrible3 wrote: A flat 4 and a 180* v 4 are completely different. The crank shaft design being the main difference.