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-   -   New BMW off road 450 (http://www.gasgasrider.org/forum/showthread.php?t=962)

gasgasman 04-21-2007 01:35 PM

New BMW off road 450
 
http://www.offroadchampions.com/a_BMW.jpg

Not bad looking.
Engine exposed a little too much.

Dave 04-21-2007 09:54 PM

EFI, linkless Ohlins, primary clutch, tank under the seat, check out the swing arm pivot location. BMW certainly went their own way with this one.

wise old man 04-22-2007 05:50 AM

Yes very BMW and yes those engine cases must be made of some super strong space age material.:eek:

GMP 04-22-2007 03:17 PM

Quote:

EFI, linkless Ohlins, primary clutch, tank under the seat, check out the swing arm pivot location. BMW certainly went their own way with this one.

Or the way of a small bicycle company from PA.

jeffd 04-22-2007 09:49 PM

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0ZcqEqUzIAY

...Hanging out in the husqvarna pits?

jeff

GMP 04-22-2007 10:03 PM

Some very innovative stuff, with the $$ to back up development. I bet it makes an FSR 450 seem cheap($$) by comparison.

If it comes to Hancock, NY I'll get some photos.

gasgasman 04-24-2007 06:38 PM

Close up of motor.
The clutch is driven directly off the crank shaft.
Looks like a closed loop* fuel injection system, as opposed to Gas Gas' old school speed density* setup.

http://www.motorcycledaily.com/042407bottom.jpg


*Closed Loop-uses an oxygen sensor and air flow sensor to determine fuel delivery.
*Speed density- uses throttle position sensor to determine fuel/air ratios based off predetermined parameters matrix.

GMP 04-24-2007 09:11 PM

Girard, your an auto tech. My buddy who is as well tells me, along with the Optimum guys who did Cannondale's system, that closed loop is great but the O2 sensor needs an air referance port that would be too hard to keep clean enough on a dirt bike. He said a lot of 4x4 trucks that see mud bogs come in with trouble and are found to be dirty sensors. Thoughts?

All that tech and a cable clutch?:confused:

Is that really PDS or possibly a type of top mount linkage? hard to see for sure.

gasgasman 04-24-2007 09:22 PM

Yeah, you're right about the O2 sensors.

The automotive 02 sensors vent through the sheath that covers the wires going into the sensor body.
I imagine water would get down into that sheath.

The clutch seems really small.
Being driven by the crankshaft, I think it would be spinning too fast to keep the clutch plates lubricated.
They probably had to go with a cable clutch because there was no room for the hydrualic set up,would make the engine too wide.

gasgasman 04-24-2007 09:37 PM

Found this:

Quote:
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BMW patents new chain drive

01 March 2007
BMW has filed a patent for a completely new motorcycle concept that would allow extreme suspension travel while minimising the amount of slack needed in a drive chain, belt or shaft.



A conventional motorcycle needs free play in the drive chain to allow for movement in the rear suspension. On an off-road motorcycle this becomes even more important, and with suspension travel of 300mm the chain needs about 70mm free play at the tightest point. Such a slack chain results in power losses and high wear rates through friction, and would need a chain guide to stop the chain jumping off the sprockets.



The clutch is usually mounted on the gearbox output shaft on a motorcycle, but inventor Markis Theobald, in Patent Number EP1743832 filed on behalf of Bayerische Motoren Werke AG (DE) on 17 January 2007 proposes mounting it on the engine crankshaft. The gearbox output shaft can then be co-axial with the swingarm pivot, so that chain tension is always maintained without unwanted slack.



An added advantage of the BMW design is that because the clutch turns at engine speed instead of the usual half engine speed of a conventionally mounted clutch, a smaller, lighter unit can be used.
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