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racedoll 10-09-2009 12:44 AM

Break in period
 
How many of you followed the manufacturer's recommended break in period?

Why did you or did you not follow it?

Mikey 10-09-2009 01:03 AM

I sort of follow it. I stay off the highway to avoid constant revs, I don't rev the bike in neutral, and I keep it under the redline. Other than that, I pretty much break it in the way I'm going to ride it.

lauralynne 10-09-2009 01:06 AM

I took it straight to the track. if it's going to break, I'd rather it still be under warranty.

Just kidding. I've never owned a new vehicle including bikes.

fasternyou929 10-09-2009 01:19 AM

I followed the break-in period for both my new bikes. You'll hear all kinds of arguments from both sides about which is better. In the end, I decided the people that designed and built it know better than anyone else and I've never had any problems.

That's not to say if I took it to the track right away I would have had problems.

You might be better off asking what tires are best for street riding. :lol:

zer0t 10-09-2009 04:05 AM

I have always followed the break-in periods even for the newly redone engine on my Harley. Why? I don't want to anger the gods, what does it hurt to do it anyway, and perhaps I am too weak minded to deviate from the expected norm. That's three reasons.

OneSickPsycho 10-09-2009 06:02 AM

I tried... Really I did... It was just too boring!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

was92v 10-09-2009 07:23 AM

My process for a new bike is: Don't lug it, don't rev the piss out of it and don't hold a steady RPM for miles on end. Change the oil and filter at 500 miles and again at a 1000 and call it done.

marko138 10-09-2009 08:03 AM

I've never owned a brand new bike. So it doesn't apply as far as that goes. Wife bought a new car last year. We went semi-easy on it for 1000 miles. A few hard accelerations here and there. Didn't baby it.

Trip 10-09-2009 08:32 AM

Honda's break in on the 07 600rr was "vary speed." That was it. That was all the instructions it gives you for break in. So I varied speed.

I did the typical break in on the SV, but I was also a new rider so I wasn't pushing it hard the first 600.

Rider 10-09-2009 09:04 AM

I rode them normally. After a few hundred miles I'd stretch their legs and take it up close to redline.

Particle Man 10-09-2009 09:19 AM

My SV is the first and only new bike I've ever owned. I followed the break-in instructions in the manual (they weren't all that difficult and I burned through the mileage requirement in the first week).

karl_1052 10-09-2009 10:13 AM

I broke mine in by the book.
Since I didn't ride for a year, getting on a 170hp missle and just cranking it would be nuts, so I kept it under 5500rpm for the first 1000kms.
That is still 114hp, so it is not like it was slow or anything.

CrazyKell 10-09-2009 10:32 AM

I don't remember my break in period but I know I tried to follow the recommendations. :idk:

Sean 10-09-2009 11:23 AM

I always go slow now. I think that mototune or whatever it's called hard breakin method is BS. An engineer friend was talking about it last weekend and he said all their data was based on lawnmower motors.

The previous owner of my husky broke it in hard and the motor was worn out very quickly--I rebuilt it and broke it in soft and the difference is very noticeable. I'm hardly getting any junk on the drain plug even with ~70% of the miles that the last motor lasted in total.

Homeslice 10-09-2009 11:55 AM

The owners manual is dumb......They are more concerned about parents suing them due to kids over-riding their ability than they are about product longevity.

The factory already tests the engines before shipping them, and I can assure you they rev them above the limits specified in the ghey owners manual.

Here is what I do:

1) Don't sit around "warming it up" for more than 30 seconds.....Your engine wants to work, not sit around idling.
2) Ride around gently for the first 15 minutes, before putting significant loads on it.
3) Once it has warmed up, start doing a lot of acceleration & engine braking runs.....Not WOT to redline like the "Mototune" article recommends, but more than the ghey owners manual allows.
4) Don't cruise at one RPM........that's bad for break-in.
5) Don't lug the motor (let the motor drop to 2K and then try and accelerate.....it's bad for it)
6) Your first few trips should be at least 20-30 minutes, and after each trip you should park it and let it cool down overnight......Not just an hour or two.
7) Change the oil after the first 100 miles.

t-homo 10-09-2009 12:12 PM

here is the mototune website, fwiw.

http://www.mototuneusa.com/break_in_secrets.htm

Rider 10-09-2009 12:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by t-rock (Post 276302)
here is the mototune website, fwiw.

http://www.mototuneusa.com/break_in_secrets.htm

I've read that site before. I'm not sure beating the piss out of your engine is the way to go either.

Sean 10-09-2009 12:52 PM

You need to heat cycle the motor until the metals harden. Beating the piss out of it might give more power right off the bat but it's gonna last half as long.

RedRider2k2 10-09-2009 01:01 PM

I've argued this a thousand times and I still stand by that link. It's way closer to what you should be doing than what's in the manual.

Particle Man 10-09-2009 01:10 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RedRider2k2 (Post 276337)
I've argued this a thousand times and I still stand by that link. It's way closer to what you should be doing than what's in the manual.

NO! YOU'RE WRONG!



(I honestly don't know but someone had to do it :lol:)

skiergirl 10-09-2009 01:26 PM

I did what most do, kinda follow the recommendations. I rode it like normal but made sure it was hill country riding, no constant RPM's went through all the gears, never red lined and changed the oil at 500 miles, after that it was at the track before it had 1000 miles on it and at over 11,000 so far it still runs perfectly.

fasternyou929 10-09-2009 02:09 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RedRider2k2 (Post 276337)
I've argued this a thousand times and I still stand by that link. It's way closer to what you should be doing than what's in the manual.

Not looking to recreate an old debate, but if beating the piss out of a new motor were the way to go, why would manufacturers have a break-in period versus saying "here's your new bike, go ride it"?

askmrjesus 10-09-2009 02:53 PM

Turn the key.

Break in period over.

JC

CasterTroy 10-09-2009 03:08 PM

I used this on the TLR and the CBR (when rebuilt)

Quote:

You can follow the directions in your owner's manual, or you can read the following and form your own opinion. Many of us subscribe to the belief that the owner's manual method just doesn't do the job...
"The best way to "break-in" any new piston engine is to NOT "baby it" by keeping the RPM under some manufacturer's "magical limit". Have you ever heard the line "if you don't break it in hard, it will never run hard?" Well, there IS quite a bit of merit to this statement once all the reasons are fully understood.
I'm sure that we can all agree that THE ONLY WAY any piston engine "breaks in" is by "wearing off" and "polishing" any and all the "high spots" to make a perfect, custom, low friction fit between all the important parts. Time alone at reduced RPM WILL NOT ACCOMPLISH THIS! It takes MAX RPM for all the parts to make contact that would NOT normally contact and "wear-in" at some reduced RPM level. The best method for this to occur is to run the engine right up to the manufacturers listed "red line", BUT with the LEAST LOAD POSSIBLE (remember load = heat and NEW pistons DO NOT like excessive heat!).
How do you do this? Well, with any vehicle that has a gearbox, it's real easy. When the bike/vehicle is brand new, you begin a series of "low load", HIGH RPM runs (right up to red line), but ONLY in FIRST GEAR. This gives the VERY necessary "high RPM wear-in" for the pistons and max "gas pressure" on the rings to press them into the cylinder wall so they can seat WITHOUT high load/heat. This first gear high RPM blast will only last a second or so max. DO NOT be tempted to run through all the gears on a new bike - WAY TOO MUCH LOAD = HEAT! In fact, it's well known that if you DO hold WOT on your new bike in top gear, the piston-to-wall clearance can actually approach a PRESS FIT!!! As the mileage rolls up on your bike/vehicle, you can create higher load by simply going UP into the next gear and grab WOT, to your max RPM "redline". What I normally suggest is that you perform a "WOT first gear blast" about every 20 miles or so until you reach 100 to 150 miles. "Second gear WOT blasts" will obviously take longer (about 2 seconds) because of the taller gear and more load and should be performed at about the same intervals as the "first gear runs" and continued until around 500 miles. Continuing with the above WOT and "next highest gear" scenario is pretty much up to the individual and is not completely written in stone as to how fast to progress through all the gears, but completion of all 5 or 6 "WOT gear runs" should be within 1500 to 2000 miles (very subjective here).
An occasional COMPLETE COOLING OFF about every 100 miles or so is very important to help "heat cycle" and "season" the various high temp engine components. If you want to know the WORST WAY to break in an engine, just follow the manufacturers suggestions "TO THE LETTER" by keeping your engine under some "magical RPM limit" and continue to upshift all the way into 5th or 6th to prevent exceeding this "contrived RPM limit" while adding a little more throttle to keep up the pace with traffic (or your buddies!). You can easily see that you will eventually begin to "lug" the engine which is ABSOLUTELY THE WORST THING you could do to your new ride. With this scenario, you will quickly get into that "operational press fit" situation I described above - possibly damaging your engine. So - LET IT REV!!! (within the above guide lines of course)."

Homeslice 10-09-2009 04:15 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by fasternyou929 (Post 276368)
Not looking to recreate an old debate, but if beating the piss out of a new motor were the way to go, why would manufacturers have a break-in period versus saying "here's your new bike, go ride it"?

Simple:

1) They don't know/don't care which method is best -- they simply chose the one that is less likely to break something and cause warranty claims.

2) They know that a large % of bike purchases are newbies, and they want to avoid the lawsuits & bad publicity caused by new riders riding too fast too soon and crashing.

Gas Man 10-09-2009 09:35 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rider (Post 276224)
I rode them normally. After a few hundred miles I'd stretch their legs and take it up close to redline.

I'm the same way. I dont beat the piss out of it. I dont rev it too high for the first 1k. But I will give it some go go juice. Just no WOT.

Oh and NO NO NO lugging.

Tmall 10-09-2009 09:51 PM

Don't they run all their engines to redline upon assembly?

pauldun170 10-09-2009 10:02 PM

I keep my vehicles a long time so I follow the manufacturers recommendation.

the chi 10-09-2009 10:13 PM

I stay mostly within the guidelines. Im no engineer or tested bike manufacturer, so I'd rather follow their advice than what someone tells me or I read on the internet. I am highly suspect of anyone that tells me to completely ignore my owners manual and do it their way.

askmrjesus 10-09-2009 10:17 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by pauldun170 (Post 276528)
I keep my vehicles a long time so I follow the manufacturers recommendation.

Pussy.

JC

karl_1052 10-09-2009 10:45 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by askmrjesus (Post 276532)
Pussy.

JC

why are you calling him a pussy?
You have had your bike 1993 years longer than him.

Sixxxxer 10-10-2009 11:47 AM

I'm with AMJ...I hit Redline within the first 50 Miles of owning the ZX6...I cant find the website right now but there was a guy who wrote up a story on how driving cars/bikes harder than the "break in " period allows for actually makes the engines withstand more as far as abuse goes...and I've heard that some newer cars will make more power based on the ECU and it knowing how often you go WOT and whatnot.

Personally...I think break in periods are stupid...But thats just my opinion.

RedRider2k2 10-10-2009 04:38 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by fasternyou929 (Post 276368)
Not looking to recreate an old debate, but if beating the piss out of a new motor were the way to go, why would manufacturers have a break-in period versus saying "here's your new bike, go ride it"?

Quote:

Originally Posted by Homeslice (Post 276431)
Simple:

1) They don't know/don't care which method is best -- they simply chose the one that is less likely to break something and cause warranty claims.

2) They know that a large % of bike purchases are newbies, and they want to avoid the lawsuits & bad publicity caused by new riders riding too fast too soon and crashing.

Exactly. From another post on another site...

Quote:

Originally Posted by Redrider2k2
We've already spoke of this. A lot of people have a hard enough time even riding a new bike let alone doing a proper hard break-in. The manufacturers give you a safe middle of the road break in procedure because they know most people wont screw it up. Does it work for the most part? Sure. Their bikes last alright and work fine. But, they have been known to have horsepower gains and last just as long or longer with nothing more than a proper break in.

When Diesel Engines are rebuilt or tested new they are ran on a Dyno. They dont pussyfoot around either. They idle for a few minutes to get a quick check over for leaks etc, run with a slight load until up to operating temp then they scream their guts out for a while at max rated Horsepower and finally are lugged down nice and low to their max rated torque.

But I guess Truck engines dont last that long....Right? :lol:


Homeslice 10-10-2009 04:53 PM

net-net: owners manual=crap

Dave 10-10-2009 08:41 PM

#1 they break em in on the dyno before it leaves the factory #2 you want to cut the rings like you are going to ride the bike

Tmall 10-11-2009 07:35 AM

I didn't break my buell in stupid hard. But, I redlined the first 3 gears the first time I took it out.

I took it home, let it cool down. Ran it through a few more heat cycles and then changed the oil.

There was a bit of metal on the drain plug, that was it. And I've run it normally since.
In about 15000 miles the only issues I've had were from cheap components and sensors. Nothing internal has gone wrong.

Tmall 10-11-2009 07:36 AM

Keep in mind, I'm of the same train of thought as redrider, when we rebuild or fix a diesel. Its gets run to idle, gets a quick look over and then its run flat out for hours.

CasterTroy 10-11-2009 08:34 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Tmall (Post 276858)
Keep in mind, I'm of the same train of thought as redrider, when we rebuild or fix a diesel. Its gets run to idle, gets a quick look over and then its run flat out for hours.

Don't you dyno it?

I've got a buddy who's lead over at Cummins atlantic, and if I'm not mistaken, he's told me when he rebuilds he "takes it straight to the dyno and runs the ever-livin-shit out of it, cause if it's gonna break, I want it to break right THERE so I can fix it and not on the road for a customer"

Tmall 10-11-2009 08:41 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CasterTroy (Post 276860)
Don't you dyno it?

I've got a buddy who's lead over at Cummins atlantic, and if I'm not mistaken, he's told me when he rebuilds he "takes it straight to the dyno and runs the ever-livin-shit out of it, cause if it's gonna break, I want it to break right THERE so I can fix it and not on the road for a customer"

While I'm not a full on diesel mechanic. They just teach us the ins and outs in case one of our generators breaks at sea. That is exactly what we do. Hook it up to the inertial dyno, start it, check over the basics, then run the piss out of it.

Before we rebuilt our engine. We had to get a baseline dyno run. Our engine upon pre-overhaul run up seized up #1 cylinder and #4 was close. All because the oil jets for the skirt cooling were plugged.

We replaced those power packs (piston, liner, rings and wrist pin) reassembled it, then put it back on the dyno and ran the piss out of it. Keeping in mind though, that every single component was gone over with a micrometer/dial gauge/feeler gauge to make sure it was fully in spec.

It didn't have a single problem except for loose wires on the starter that sparked a good bit initially.

was92v 10-11-2009 10:13 AM

Do you guys think there is a difference between a new engine /gearbox and rebuilding an engine that all the other hundreds of parts are already run in?
There are hundreds of friction points in a new engine/gearbox that are lapping in besides the cylinder walls, piston skirts and rings in a new motorcycle engine/gearbox that are not at all a concern when rebuilding a used unit. I worry more about gear tooth faces, dog surface and bearing run in, than the ring to wall seal. With the rings and the cylinder finish used these days, unless something was screwed up when it was built, the ring/wall seal in a done deal almost as soon as you start the engine. After rebuilding an engine, a couple of heat cycles to shape the piston is about it. All the rest is already done.

Tmall 10-11-2009 10:39 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by was92v (Post 276869)
Do you guys think there is a difference between a new engine /gearbox and rebuilding an engine that all the other hundreds of parts are already run in?
There are hundreds of friction points in a new engine/gearbox that are lapping in besides the cylinder walls, piston skirts and rings in a new motorcycle engine/gearbox that are not at all a concern when rebuilding a used unit. I worry more about gear tooth faces, dog surface and bearing run in, than the ring to wall seal. With the rings and the cylinder finish used these days, unless something was screwed up when it was built, the ring/wall seal in a done deal almost as soon as you start the engine. After rebuilding an engine, a couple of heat cycles to shape the piston is about it. All the rest is already done.

Every thing I've touched is honed and within spec from the factory. If it isn't, it goes back. So, I'm not quite sure what you're getting at.


If it's within spec, it will fit. If it's a faulty component, it's going to break regardless of break in. So, what benefit is there to babying it?




I wish I had my "transmission of power" notes kicking around. I can't seem to think of the manufacturing process used in gear design. Burnishing, lapping, hobbing, whatever the heck it is costs a lot and is far more accurate and is commonly used in engine applications.

Ultimately, the only time I've seen catastrophic engine failure has been because of maintainer error.

Edited to add: Most times spun bearings are caused by lack of lubrication. Crank bearings and cam bearing are made out of babbit for a reason, to allow particle embedding to the bearing and not the major components as well as to allow the bearing to wear instead of the expensive parts. And crucial components such as cams usually have bearings matched to them to precise tolerances. The ones we use, if you ding the cam or bearings, you replace everythign as a set. And to do that, we have to send the block away to have new cam bearings pressed in.
These components cost more initially for a reason, they're made to more precise tolerances using more expensive manufacturing processes.

Sean 10-11-2009 12:13 PM

This is what my piston looked like after 2000 miles with a hard breakin:

http://i181.photobucket.com/albums/x...lly/piston.jpg

Homeslice 10-11-2009 12:19 PM

Who knows whether that was due to the break-in, or questionable British quality control

Sean 10-11-2009 12:20 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Homeslice (Post 276902)
Who knows whether that was due to the break-in, or questionable British quality control

Yup, those Italian manufacturers all employ British quality control agents.

Homeslice 10-11-2009 12:25 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sean (Post 276903)
Yup, those Italian manufacturers all employ British quality control agents.

So this was the Husky, not your Triumph? My bad.......but the Italians aren't really known for quality either. :lol: Also, you said it had a previous owner......What else might he have done to it besides a hard break-in?

Kerry_129 10-11-2009 12:39 PM

I agree with the 'break it in with hard throttle, but gentle/repeated heat cycling' line of thought - and an oil change after the first few miles, not 600~1000.

http://www.mototuneusa.com/break_in_secrets.htm

Tmall 10-11-2009 12:54 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sean (Post 276896)
This is what my piston looked like after 2000 miles with a hard breakin:

http://i181.photobucket.com/albums/x...lly/piston.jpg

Explain how scoring on the thrust side of the piston would be caused by hard break in?

Likely causes, no cooling to the bottom of the piston, the piston rings had the gap close to each other, or fuel dilution of your oil. Unless that piston is coated, it looks like there is a ton of soot on top. Which leads me to think fuel dilution.

I'm far from an expert. Just falling KISS logic.

Edit: Where's the top ring? Were the rings installed upside down? Or in the wrong position?

karl_1052 10-11-2009 02:26 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sixxxxer (Post 276655)
I'm with AMJ...I hit Redline within the first 50 Miles of owning the ZX6...I cant find the website right now but there was a guy who wrote up a story on how driving cars/bikes harder than the "break in " period allows for actually makes the engines withstand more as far as abuse goes...and I've heard that some newer cars will make more power based on the ECU and it knowing how often you go WOT and whatnot.

Personally...I think break in periods are stupid...But thats just my opinion.

the difference in power on any bike is going to be negligible based solely on break in.

RedRider2k2 10-11-2009 04:04 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Tmall (Post 276913)
Explain how scoring on the thrust side of the piston would be caused by hard break in?

Yes, please do.

That's either an assembly error, manufacturing error, or the person doing this "Hard break in" didnt know the difference between "Break in" and "Abuse".

RedRider2k2 10-11-2009 04:09 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by was92v (Post 276869)
Do you guys think there is a difference between a new engine /gearbox and rebuilding an engine that all the other hundreds of parts are already run in?
There are hundreds of friction points in a new engine/gearbox that are lapping in besides the cylinder walls, piston skirts and rings in a new motorcycle engine/gearbox that are not at all a concern when rebuilding a used unit.

No, not really. All those friction points you speak of are either replaced with new or measured to make sure they're within Spec. You dont toss on a new set of rings and call it "Rebuilt". I'm talking front to back, top to bottom, EVERYTHING gets stripped down and gone over with a micrometer.

askmrjesus 10-11-2009 04:50 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sean (Post 276896)
This is what my piston looked like after 2000 miles with a hard breakin:

Sorry, but you can't automatically chalk that up to a "hard" break in. Any number of things could have caused that damage.

My DR650 thumper was broken in to spec, and the fucker hand-grenaded the bottom end at 16K miles, (I'm pretty sure the shift fork was the culprit). So, what does that prove? Nothing. If shit's gonna break, then shit's gonna break.

I wouldn't rev the ever loving piss out of a brand new engine, but after the first oil change (100 miles), all bets are off.

JC

Homeslice 10-11-2009 06:11 PM

Quote:

The best method for this to occur is to run the engine right up to the manufacturers listed "red line", BUT with the LEAST LOAD POSSIBLE (remember load = heat and NEW pistons DO NOT like excessive heat!).
How do you do this? Well, with any vehicle that has a gearbox, it's real easy. When the bike/vehicle is brand new, you begin a series of "low load", HIGH RPM runs (right up to red line), but ONLY in FIRST GEAR. This gives the VERY necessary "high RPM wear-in" for the pistons and max "gas pressure" on the rings to press them into the cylinder wall so they can seat WITHOUT high load/heat.
Not understanding the logic here.....Why would a first-gear blast produce "less load" than, say, a second-gear blast? Just because it's shorter? But the accelerative forces are higher in 1st gear, so you would think that would produce more load.

Tmall 10-11-2009 07:12 PM

I've been drinking, so bare with me slice.

The amount of power produced doesn't change. You can manipulate that with gearing, but the forces being applied to the gears should always be the same.

Power out equals power in. First law of thermo.

Tmall 10-11-2009 07:17 PM

Since I can't edit on my phone..

I can however see the forces acting for a longer duration on the piston at higher revs since the same amount of force is being applied over a longer distance/time.

Homeslice 10-11-2009 08:28 PM

Power produced would be the same I agree, but the G-forces are higher in 1st.... after all it is easier to loop a bike in 1st than 2nd or 3rd. So I would think it would put more load on the bearings. But I don't know shit about physics.

racedoll 10-11-2009 08:38 PM

Damn this thread is long. I forgot I posted it on Thursday/Friday before going away.

Quote:

Originally Posted by fasternyou929 (Post 276170)
I followed the break-in period for both my new bikes. You'll hear all kinds of arguments from both sides about which is better. In the end, I decided the people that designed and built it know better than anyone else and I've never had any problems.

That's not to say if I took it to the track right away I would have had problems.

You might be better off asking what tires are best for street riding. :lol:

I figured this would be a questionable subject but I thought I'd take my chances on the answers.

Quote:

Originally Posted by OneSickPsycho (Post 276183)
I tried... Really I did... It was just too boring!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

I know what you mean. I rode mine per break-in home from the dealer. Hubby asked why I was going so slow (not even the speed limit of 55mph). I told him I was following break-in... so after that he told me to at least go the speed limit.

Quote:

Originally Posted by fasternyou929 (Post 276368)
Not looking to recreate an old debate, but if beating the piss out of a new motor were the way to go, why would manufacturers have a break-in period versus saying "here's your new bike, go ride it"?

That is kind of my thought, but at the same time I couldn't not do the speed limit for 1000 miles or whatever break-in suggested.

Quote:

Originally Posted by askmrjesus (Post 276950)
If shit's gonna break, then shit's gonna break.
JC

:iagree:

Tmall 10-11-2009 09:15 PM

I meant at higher gears .

RedRider2k2 10-11-2009 10:43 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Homeslice (Post 276958)
Not understanding the logic here.....Why would a first-gear blast produce "less load" than, say, a second-gear blast? Just because it's shorter? But the accelerative forces are higher in 1st gear, so you would think that would produce more load.

Where did you quote that from? I'm not sure I agree with it but anyway...

The reason there is less load on the engine in 1st is because the gear reduction in 1st gear makes it easier to drive the bike forward and reach redline. In higher gears the ratio is not so much in your favor and it takes more work. It's pretty much the same reason that if you have a worn clutch, it's most likely to slip in high gear.

fasternyou929 10-11-2009 11:16 PM

One question for everyone that likes to hit red-line before the first oil change: are you not worried about metal shavings cycling through the engine with the oil? Isn't that one of the main reasons for low RPM's at first, to cycle the oil at a slower rate, increasing the chances metal will stay at the bottom of the oil pan?
Quote:

Originally Posted by Homeslice (Post 276958)
Not understanding the logic here.....Why would a first-gear blast produce "less load" than, say, a second-gear blast? Just because it's shorter? But the accelerative forces are higher in 1st gear, so you would think that would produce more load.

Simplest way to understand this - assuming you've ridden a mountain bike or multi-speed bike. Put your pedal bike in 1st gear and sprint to your maximum speed. You should reach your maximum speed quickly and with little effort.

Now do it again in a middle gear... it'll take a lot more effort to get to that max speed (load to an engine), not just time.

If you're a glutton for punishment, put it in its top gear now (10th, 18th, 24th, whatever) and repeat. Have water handy and be ready for your quads to scream at you. :lol:

Kerry_129 10-11-2009 11:19 PM

For a given amount of air & fuel introduced (throttle), a motor will produce the same output & the internals "see" the same thermal & mechanical stresses, regardless of which gear it's in - it's only the reaction (acceleration) which varies. (edit: assuming it's not 'free' revving)

So which oil should I use for break-in?.... :lol:

Homeslice 10-11-2009 11:28 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RedRider2k2 (Post 277058)
Where did you quote that from? I'm not sure I agree with it but anyway...
.

From Castor Troy's quote



Quote:

Originally Posted by RedRider2k2 (Post 277058)
The reason there is less load on the engine in 1st is because the gear reduction in 1st gear makes it easier to drive the bike forward and reach redline. In higher gears the ratio is not so much in your favor and it takes more work. It's pretty much the same reason that if you have a worn clutch, it's most likely to slip in high gear

Eh....I think the reason most people experience clutch slip only in the higher gears is because those are the only gears they go WOT in......They're too pussy to go WOT in first :lol:

I was just assuming that 1st puts the most stress because it has to overcome momentum from a dead stop. You know how when someone needs a push start, and a bunch of guys start pusing on the car until it starts moving? Well, it's hard as hell to get it moving, but once it's moving, it's pretty damn easy.

Sean 10-12-2009 01:11 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Tmall (Post 276913)
Explain how scoring on the thrust side of the piston would be caused by hard break in?

I never said it was a cause -> effect relationship, I'm simply showing my personal experience. The guy who did the rebuild listed a number of factors, but I do know the previous owner put it on a dyno straight out of the box. The new top end has hardly coughed up anything.

Quote:

Originally Posted by RedRider2k2 (Post 276941)
That's either an assembly error, manufacturing error, or the person doing this "Hard break in" didnt know the difference between "Break in" and "Abuse".

It's my guess that most people doing a "hard breakin" don't know the difference either, including the guy who had my Husky.

Dave 10-12-2009 10:42 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Homeslice (Post 277095)
From Castor Troy's quote




Eh....I think the reason most people experience clutch slip only in the higher gears is because those are the only gears they go WOT in......They're too pussy to go WOT in first :lol:

I was just assuming that 1st puts the most stress because it has to overcome momentum from a dead stop. You know how when someone needs a push start, and a bunch of guys start pusing on the car until it starts moving? Well, it's hard as hell to get it moving, but once it's moving, it's pretty damn easy.

wot in 1st is asking for a 12o'clock on my bike :lol:

CasterTroy 10-12-2009 11:08 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Dave (Post 277190)
wot in 1st is asking for a 12o'clock on my bike :lol:

WOT and low load redline are complete opposites you can low load redline any bike in 1st without fear of a wheelie....takes what seems to be forever to get there, bcause you're cracking the throttle just above idle to GET there, but it's how I've seen a few engines "broke in" after rebuild...especially 2-strokes :idk:

RedRider2k2 10-12-2009 10:26 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Homeslice (Post 277095)
Eh....I think the reason most people experience clutch slip only in the higher gears is because those are the only gears they go WOT in......They're too pussy to go WOT in first :lol

On a bike this is pretty much true but that's how you test a slipping clutch in anything.


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