Ok, got the +4 gear installed. We then took the bike for about a half hour ride, checked the fuel trims with the Auto Tune and put in on the dyno to test it. We made a few tweeks to the map on the dyno however there were no signifigant changes required and this was verified in the Auto Tune trim table which in most cells did not change from the base map. For those of you not familiar with exactly what the +4 advance gear does, it is a replacement cam drive gear that will advance the cam timing globally 4 degrees both intake & exhaust. It does not require pulling the cams to replace, only the exhaust and cam cover. In theory, an earlier intake valve event timing will produce torque earlier in the RPM range, the effects on advancing the exhaust cam are slighly less predictable. What we found today is that at least with the combination we are testing that there was only a very slight difference with the +gear as peak #s were within 1Hp/1Tq. While with the +4 gear it does make torque earlier it is only slight, without it peak Hp is up slightly. Not a signifigant change in any way.
Either way the TW6-6 is a awesome cam with proven results on our dyno many times over, a truly excellent all around cam. The combination on this 96" bike pulls like a freight train from down low and makes over +95 TQ 2700-5250 RPM!
Dynojet PC-V Auto Tune Trim table with +4 advance gear
Direct comparison between Wood TW6-6 cams and TW6-6 cams with +4 advance gear
Either way the TW6-6 is a awesome cam with proven results on our dyno many times over, a truly excellent all around cam. The combination on this 96" bike pulls like a freight train from down low and makes over +95 TQ 2700-5250 RPM!
Dynojet PC-V Auto Tune Trim table with +4 advance gear
Direct comparison between Wood TW6-6 cams and TW6-6 cams with +4 advance gear