'15 Road Glide w. Aerocharger Turbo
#11
#12
Originally Posted by IdahoHacker;
I'd love to see some before and after dyno charts and numbers.
- Dyno'd stock at the dealer
- Dyno'd again with the Aerocharger system, running pump gas @7psi. Stock cam and internals/ no intercooler.
I'd regard these as mild numbers - an intercooler, turbo cam, and more aggressive tune would open up the door for more power.
#13
I was under the impression that a blower cam was needed. I've already installed s and s mr103 cams. How would a guy know what cams work with this system. Do you make systems that bolt up to breakouts. I ran across another setup on a breakout but it wasn't yours. If the stock lower end holds surely a clutch upgrade would be needed....
#14
I was under the impression that a blower cam was needed. I've already installed s and s mr103 cams. How would a guy know what cams work with this system. Do you make systems that bolt up to breakouts. I ran across another setup on a breakout but it wasn't yours. If the stock lower end holds surely a clutch upgrade would be needed....
Our tech Scotty offered a basic run-down on cam selection:
Different cam durations are going to change the onset of torque vs hp. A duration of 240 or less skews torque delivery toward the low end of the rpm range. 250 offers mid-range torque, and 260 would put it at the high end. Where do you want your torque? If the intent for your turbo bike is to be streetable, you'll get the most benefit from a cam that delivers torque at 3k rather than 5k, cause your engine will be running at 3k way more often. If you're building the bike for the drag track, you might want high-end power at the expense of low-end torque.
Aerocharger turbos offer a different power band, which can affect your choice of cam. Blower cams usually have very low duration, which is intended to compensate for the load that conventional turbos or superchargers would put on the engine. On the other hand, the Aerocharger is an ultra-efficient variable vane turbo, and it puts out exceptional low-end power. On our applications, since we're getting very early power anyway, we can get away with running a mid-range cam for bigger top-end hp.
Hope that helps. S&S also has a great write-up on their site about this, and you're welcome to call us anytime for advice on any performance build.
#15
We're looking into options for Softails and Dynas, but right now we only have options available for baggers. As far as clutching, you will have to run a heavy-duty spring to prevent slippage. We go ahead and include one in every kit to save you some time.
Our tech Scotty offered a basic run-down on cam selection:
Different cam durations are going to change the onset of torque vs hp. A duration of 240 or less skews torque delivery toward the low end of the rpm range. 250 offers mid-range torque, and 260 would put it at the high end. Where do you want your torque? If the intent for your turbo bike is to be streetable, you'll get the most benefit from a cam that delivers torque at 3k rather than 5k, cause your engine will be running at 3k way more often. If you're building the bike for the drag track, you might want high-end power at the expense of low-end torque.
Aerocharger turbos offer a different power band, which can affect your choice of cam. Blower cams usually have very low duration, which is intended to compensate for the load that conventional turbos or superchargers would put on the engine. On the other hand, the Aerocharger is an ultra-efficient variable vane turbo, and it puts out exceptional low-end power. On our applications, since we're getting very early power anyway, we can get away with running a mid-range cam for bigger top-end hp.
Hope that helps. S&S also has a great write-up on their site about this, and you're welcome to call us anytime for advice on any performance build.
Our tech Scotty offered a basic run-down on cam selection:
Different cam durations are going to change the onset of torque vs hp. A duration of 240 or less skews torque delivery toward the low end of the rpm range. 250 offers mid-range torque, and 260 would put it at the high end. Where do you want your torque? If the intent for your turbo bike is to be streetable, you'll get the most benefit from a cam that delivers torque at 3k rather than 5k, cause your engine will be running at 3k way more often. If you're building the bike for the drag track, you might want high-end power at the expense of low-end torque.
Aerocharger turbos offer a different power band, which can affect your choice of cam. Blower cams usually have very low duration, which is intended to compensate for the load that conventional turbos or superchargers would put on the engine. On the other hand, the Aerocharger is an ultra-efficient variable vane turbo, and it puts out exceptional low-end power. On our applications, since we're getting very early power anyway, we can get away with running a mid-range cam for bigger top-end hp.
Hope that helps. S&S also has a great write-up on their site about this, and you're welcome to call us anytime for advice on any performance build.
#16
#17
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Aerocharger_jerry (04-28-2016)
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