Mark here from M3
I see the Ebay auction has people talking so let's clear up some odd notions going on here. When we first started racing the CR750's I had 2-3 sets of the CR 750 Kit Racing primary chains in my parts selection. These were much superior to standard OEM chains and we never had any breakage, but I used the F1 life-ing system to parts replacement. ie: replace parts at certain intervals that one determines via testing, to be within safe limits of the parts life before they break. Nice to do, when you have the extra parts and time to take the engine down. We finally ran out of parts and at the same time increased RWHP to just over 100HP. Yes, that is 100 RWHP from 762cc's. Our rider had also honed his skills on the M3 CR750 and began "back'n the bike into the corners" ie: By going from 5th to 2nd directly and feathering in the clutch, causing the rear of the bike to "rear steer' into the corners, as it started to slide. Nice, exciting and put us miles ahead of any F750 rider/team so far. This combo had OEM chains coming thru the top of the engine cases from extreme "back loading" of the engine on a regular bassis. I started to look into the Hy Vo chain thing I had heard about for years, funny no one had ever done it. Some even said we should go with DOHC Honda 750 crank, as we could also change bore/stroke ratio. Wow, that sounds fun.... now we can try two things at same time and really screw up our winning combination. I set out to do the Hy Vo thing with CB750A crank and the GoldWing clutch dampener. Working directly with Morris Chains I found an engineer to work with and I had a source for my endless chains. Funny thing is...I was never able to find out where to get these chains from all those "experts" out there that were telling everyone, who would listen about the Hy Vo fix...because NO ONE ever did it!
To make the Hy Vo work, it needs two things, great tensioning system and an oil supply was what I was told. I made a special tensioning system and provided oil from rear galley at oil pressure switch area. This sytem did work and did extend time between changing out chains, but was not the most cost effective way to proced, so I have been looking for another way. Seems like we never broke any chains with Honda CR750 racing primary chains, when changed out on a carefuly timed schedule. ie: once a year, and yes we raced a lot for the first 3 years. (1997-1999)
Needless to say, I could never find any of those Honda CR750 chains...until now. Just last week I was contacted with an expert and now have 10 sets coming in first order. I have very detailed specs and comparison specs between OEM Honda and these new chains. At the same time as this happend, I was "schooled" on what breaks chains and it is NOT the acceleration under full throttle, but the loads that are impossed on the chain during deceleration! Fluctuating Tension is what the engineer told me..is what causes this. Also, when I started to look back on the engines (CB750/900/1100 & Kaw 500 twin) that used Hy Vo chains...they all drove the transmission via a "jack shaft" thus changing the chain speed and loads applied to the primary Hy Vo chain. As you now, the crank drives the tramission/clutch directly and at 10,500 RPM (sometimes 11,500) on the CB750 SOHC..that is too high for Hy Vo. Confirmed by my engineering contact at Morris, and knowing that I could not install a jackshaft drive system, I gave up on going that way. In fact, we stopped racing at the 100% level in 2001, due to the "racing became a job thing" with all the maintenance required to compete at that level.
Then within the last weeks, I found the direct replacement drive chains that are listed on e-bay now. I have 10 sets coming in first shipment and 4 are pre-sold. The price will be $450.00 per set, and that is a deal... compared to spending dollars you need to to get Hy Vo right. Don't get me wrong, the Hy Vo can work, but the cost is very high and you will have to "life cycle" the chains on a regular bassis.
To sum this all up...we are a racing team and company that has travelled all over the world to race the best and are constantly striving to go faster, make more HP and win races. Doing this, we break parts, we improve them, we break other parts..on and on. I feel that these new chains are a very sound product and will work in any CB750 from street to roadrace.
Please any questions, contact me via web or phone.
Racing into the past,
Mark @ M3