Tony wrote:You will always be better off running 220 volt motors than 110 volt motors, because they will draw half the current for the same sized motor.
That makes it a lot easier on whatever you decide to use to electronically control the motor speed.
Hi Tony,
Thank you for the reply! I called my electrician friend and told him that I was thinking of running two of the motors, and after reading him the specs on the 240v motors, he sounds confident that we can make it work. On a side note, I ordered Bruce's plans, and look forward to receiving them!
I've been reading a few books: "How to Port & Flow Test Cylinder Heads" by David Vizard, "Air flow & How To Get It" by Joseph DeAngelis, and will be picking up a copy of "Engine Airflow" by Harold Bettes when I get finished with the others. I've been messing with 2-stroke performance for quite a while, but even though these books focus on 4-stroke engines, I wish I had read them a long time ago!
If I ever get a nice big chunk of free time, I may post up some of my 2-stroke porting projects.
It's fun to take these scooter engines that are born doing 30mph @ 50cc, and tune them into 74cc 65+MPH screamers. I should be into the 9 second territory in the 1/8 mile next time I make it to the drag strip. Best ET of the season is 10.283 - which is still lazy compared to a lot of the well-tuned bikes using the big name parts and tuners. I'm using decent parts, but most of them were found in the scrap bin.
Cheers!
~Josh