Last week, a customer brought me a pretty solid 1980 GS 550 Suzuki. It didn't run awesome to begin with, but he had a brand new kirker 4-1 and K&N Dual-flange pods. I really should have gotten it running great in stock trim first, but I was going thru the carbs anyway.. Also, by-the-hour labor rates meant that I'd be saving him money trying to get it all done in one shot.
Sure enough, the carbs were #$%*ty.. .and the nifty little kit he bought had new jets and tuning hints for that bike and these mods. Pretty slick.
The bike did run okay, but not great.. so I went up on the needles.. that helped. Still, not perfect. then up ANOTHER jet size.. which made for 110s. now, 110s are huge for a little 550...
STILL, not running great. WTF? Well, it turned out that to really get it right, using about 10" of goriila tape wrapped around the pods did the trick... and the bike ran fantastic. BUT, I seriously doubt it was any faster than stock. That the customer THOUGHT it was faster, was only due to the fact that he had never ridden it running correctly, or on all 4 cylinders for that matter.
The carbs came on and off 6 times in all, and the customer was very happy when he rode away, but this got me thinking, and I wanted to share some thoughts with all the younger guys who don't understand why these 'performance mods' are impossible to tune, and don't provide the gains they think they're entitled to.
An engine is an air pump. On a VERY SIMPLE LEVEL, it's reasonable to assume that if you provide it access to more air, and the ability to get more air out faster, it ought to make more power.
The problem comes from not thinking about what's really going on during all these strokes.
Even though there's the possibility for more flow.. the cam still keeps the valve open the same distance (lift), for the same amount of time (duration). THe lobe center is still the same, so the useful horsepower and torque curves are still in exactly the same RPM range.
Just because you can get more volume of air and fuel in and out, the compression ratio is still the same as it was, and can only ever squish but so much air and fuel together to make the 'charge' that gets lit off.
All you'll really do with these performance mods is make it tougher for the engine to create the right balance of pressure differential from the outside atmosphere to the vacuum the engine is trying to create.
At best, with no modifications to the cam or pistons, you will really only use a little more gas to make the same power it already did, and cost yourself a lot of time or money to make it run like it did before you did any of this bull$#it.
Wanting it to look and sound cooler are 100% valid reasons for doing this work. OWN THAT, say it out loud... "I THINK IT LOOKS COOL". Don't delude yourself into thinking there's going to be any appreciable difference in performance.. In fact, expect it to run worse until you do the work to make it behave more like a stock bike. (I think that might be one of the definitions of irony.)
We all know (or know of) people who put pods and pipes on their old beater and didn't have to do anything at all.. and it just ran.
To that I say.. "that's not the whole story". Every brand and style of filter and exhaust is different, every combination is different.. and some folks get lucky.. some folks also bought a bike that is a frankenstein to begin with. Maybe it was upjetted 20 years ago.. but no one knew about it.. or, some yahoo put a set of carbs from a 750 on a 550...
You will only ever know someone who lucked out in this way. You will never actually be that lucky. Except for 'Lucky" here on the boards.