Don,
Right after I posted about the carb-size thing I thought, "hey, if anyone knows what he's doing it's
this guy!", so I'm sure the 32mm carb will work great.
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Are you still experimenting with pipe design? How is that engine software working out?
Quite well! There are
tons of measurements that need to be taken for the program to work accurately, and it seems like I'm always finding ones that weren't perfectly accurate and need correcting, but the results change very little so I guess I'm OK. I don't know if the (crankshaft) horsepower and torque figures I'm getting will be achieved in real life, but the simulated powerbands correspond very closely with what I'm feeling riding the bike. The program's creator, Neels van Niekerk, has been extremely helpful and responsive to my questions, for which I'm very grateful.
I've found the MR175 motor is flow-limited pretty much equally by all three port systems (intake, exhaust, transfer), with max power & rpm being blowdown-limited by the top half of the (unbridged) exhaust port. I think your motor's max power may be more dependent on the intake flow/intake port timing and pipe design, though, as the stock ports are already generously sized and arranged for a mid-high powerband.
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one of the benefits of going with a sleeved down 125 is since the stroke is stock, I can use a readily available 125 pipe instead of needing a custom made piece.
Yes - and that's got to be one of the most popular vintage porting arrangements ever, with practically everyone making a pipe for it at one time or another. I wonder if there's anyone out there making MT125R pipes?
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I'm leaning toward Ohlins rear shocks and the 78 forks with emulators and Progressive springs. I think that combination will work good enough.
I totally agree.
One other thing before I forget; I believe the CR125M ignition has a built-in rev limiter (I'd guess it's set to about 9,000 rpm, maybe higher). I remember a being a little shocked at how high the MR's OEM points ignition would rev in the few weeks I used it. Perhaps you're using a PVL and it's a moot point. The MT125R uses a different CDI box.
Ray
P.S. While I was developing the MR motor I used a max piston speed of 3,500 fpm (10,700 rpm for 50mm stroke) which was a figure I found on the Web; since then I see that 4-stroke guys are running speeds over double that, so now I don't know what to believe (a common occurrence for me after Web searches

). Here's an easy-to-use calculator:
http://www.csgnetwork.com/pistonspeedcalc.htmlIt's too bad piston mass isn't factored into the equation. The MR175 piston must weigh at least 25% more than the CR125M one.