http://www.mototuneusa.com/break_in_secrets.htm
Iemand al ervaring met deze methode ?
Of gebruiken we deze methode onbewust omdat we eenmaal we ons nieuw speelgoedje hebben deze meteen even goed gaan testen
Ik vind wel da zijn methode steek houdt.
Of verkiezen jullie eerder deze methode
http://www.duncanracing.com/techfaq/Tec ... k-in.phtml
Beide hebben punten die met elkaar aansluiten bv steeds veranderen van toerental.
Maar bij de tweede methode spreken ze eerst van je motor gedurende 10 minuten onbelast te laten warmdraaien en verschillende malen te herhalen en dat is volgens de methode van motoman volledig uit den boze
Citaat motoman
This is the worst thing for a new engine, in fact, my advice is:
don't even start it up until you're ready to warm it up for the first ride.
The reason is that brand-new rings don't seat all the way around the 360 degrees of their circumference. The gas pressure from hard acceleration forces the rings to contact the cylinder around their entire circumference, which is the only way the rings can properly wear into the exact shape of the cylinder and seal the combustion pressure.
Now, imagine if the engine is run in the garage. There is no load on the engine, so the rings are just going up and down "along for the ride". Only a small portion of their surface is actually contacting the cylinder wall. The ring area that does contact the cylinder wears down the roughness of the honing pattern on the cylinder walls. Once the roughness of the cylinder is gone, the rings stop wearing into the cylinder. If this happens before the entire ring has worn into the cylinder and sealed, you will have a slow engine no matter how hard it gets ridden after that point.
The difference between what happens in an engine running in the garage, versus one being ridden is a hard concept to put into written words, so if I may use the sounds that we all can relate to: it's the difference between "zing-zing-zing" and "bwaaaaaaaaaAAAAAA"
Ik weet nen hele boterham maarja het gaat toch om ons nieuw speelgoedje en ik denk dat er vele met deze vraag zitten
Bartie






