All im going is by your words...
-full on the heel
-Where, if I grab full throttle, she looses RPM
-Give a stab of throttle. Sometimes it hit rpm. Sometimes bark and be 4-500 low
-Running 8100. Should be 8400 with pipe.
I dont know what or where you have the composites inside the weight.
I'll assume you have all the weight in hole #1.
This season, go out for your typical riding day as-it-is right now [if the composites are in hole 1]. Get your sea legs with riding again and find the deficiencies again, the things you did not like of the engine speed's conduct.
Then a second day, go out, same thing and get about 1/3 of the riding day in and stop. Move all the composites to position 3. Go ride. See the difference between 1 and 3 and record your new deficiencies.
You might find wanting to put weight in 2, or 2 and 3 or split it between 1,2,&3.
you must, you must, you must write a track speed down where you see the deficiency you want to clean up/solve/fix...
Aaen says you need 2 data inputs, 1 rpms, and 2 track speed. Without the track speed, you cant identify where any part in your clutches are being used in relative to your throttle input.
Example; "where i grab full throttle, she loses rpms - happened at estimated 38mph track speed.
With that track speed, you can estimate very close to how much spring force is being used, which helix angle is being used, where the spider roller on the cam arm [flyweight] is.
- If you dont measure it, you can't see it.
Hmmph, your issue(s) is why I just like to stick to old fashioned Aaen tuning; with stock OEM or fairly stock profiles, and not have composite weights at all. I'd rather have a selection of springs with different start and final forces to nail down a calibration.
To me you have an engine power shape problem. Its like having a dart board hangin by a rope, swinging like a pendulum and you're trying to hit the bullseye; basically trying to chase your engine power shape. The power shape is moving around and you're trying to chase it with clutch tuning. Id say go back to stock as possible, then nail down your clutch calibration; then change to the aftermarket exhaust parts.
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Aaen says you need 2 data inputs, 1 rpms, and 2 track speed. Without the track speed, you cant identify where any part in your clutches are being used in relative to your throttle input.
Well. In your photo. Those are my ramps. And from heel to tip iirc I am 4-3-1 total of 65g I also have a set of 4 hole 850 ramps from a friend that need bushings replaced. That's easy. I'll have to study the photo. I was under the impression that tip weight only affected high rpm. And heel was engagement/low throttle. I like my engagement now. It's perfect. It's 2/3-wot I feel is off.
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