Hello Gruntguru.
You write:
“I was talking about the absolute maximum speed - the highest speed possible with optimum gearing.”
Even if we know the real speed the motorcycle achieves with its actual gearing (and not the highest speed it would achieve with the optimum gearing), we have the required information for the calculation of the aerodynamic and rolling resistance at a specific known point.
For instance, if with the 26PS of the Kawasaki the highest speed possible (with the ideal gearing, I mean) is 150Km/h, however with its actual gearbox (a gearbox with longer gear ratios than the motorcycle of the drawing, but not the optimum gear ratios for achieving the top speed) its top speed is only 135Km/h at 11,000rpm (i.e. below the allowed rev limit of the engine, which in the power / torque plot is 12,000rpm), then we know that at 135Km/h and 11,000rpm (wherein the engine makes 19PS at most) the sum of the aerodynamic and rolling resistances is 19PS.
The problem is when the maximum speed of the motorcycle is limited by the revving capability of the engine (as in the Kawasaki KX of the drawing: at 105Km/h of its maximum speed with the longest gear in the gearbox, the engine operates at 12,000rpm).
In such a case you can’t know (and is difficult to calculate), how many of the 14PS the engine can provide at 12,000rpm, are actually provided.
On the other hand, even this way (i.e. to accept that the maximum speed is limited at 105Km/h not by the gearing but by the aerodynamic and rolling resistance) the error, the mistake in the calculations is small if you think that with 14PS a motorcycle can’t go significantly above 105Km/h.
You also write:
“That is exactly how a top-fuel dragster works! Would only be an advantage in 1'st gear for most vehicles (optimum upshifts usually land the engine above the peak-torque-rpm).”
Exactly.
With the exception of the quite peaky engines, like the Kawasaki KX of the drawing, wherein for the best acceleration / performance it is required a lot of clutch slipping / burning after every gear shift, as this drawing (RoadLoad program, same data as before, but with "hard use" of clutch) shows:
.
Only few people can get how, consuming a lot of clutch friction material, they can bridge the gaps of the “accelerating force” and so improve the performance of a motorcycle or car having peaky torque curve.
With the proper use of the clutch it is like turning their “peaky torque” engine into an engine having, from zero rpm to the rpm wherein the maximum torque is provided, constantly the maximum torque.
Thanks
Manolis Pattakos