DG? I've got a Daytona I picked up a few years back with one of them. It's still not running.KungFooBob wrote: ↑Wed Mar 24, 2021 8:35 am Needs one of those gold anodised alloy heads with the radial fins you see on all the other RD specials these days.
ULTIMATE RD: YAMAHA RD400 RESTOMOD
Re: ULTIMATE RD: YAMAHA RD400 RESTOMOD
- KungFooBob
- Posts: 14223
- Joined: Sat Mar 14, 2020 1:04 pm
- Location: The content of this post is not AI generated.
- Has thanked: 539 times
- Been thanked: 7539 times
Re: ULTIMATE RD: YAMAHA RD400 RESTOMOD
Bwana wrote: ↑Sun Mar 28, 2021 3:56 amDG? I've got a Daytona I picked up a few years back with one of them. It's still not running.KungFooBob wrote: ↑Wed Mar 24, 2021 8:35 am Needs one of those gold anodised alloy heads with the radial fins you see on all the other RD specials these days.
Yup.
-
- Posts: 3037
- Joined: Mon Mar 16, 2020 9:30 pm
- Location: Less that 50 miles away from Moscow, but which one?
- Has thanked: 1350 times
- Been thanked: 1726 times
Re: ULTIMATE RD: YAMAHA RD400 RESTOMOD
So looking at those expansion chambers, I can't see that much mention of them in the blurb but they look like stainless steel to as its more yellowish colour than chromed expansion chambers.
They might even have been tig brazed but I know almost fuckall about that.
I've never seen any stainless expansion chambers before but they do look bloody nice.
Ive just hit search to see who makes stuff like it and it seems Higgspeed in Blackpool makes some for old bikes but they look like the standard pipes.
Tyga on the other hand made them for quite a few bikes, RGVs, Aprilia RS250s, Cagiva Mitos, Honda NSR 250s (various versions) 350 LCs and a few others.
https://www.tygaeurope.com/index.php/by ... s.html?p=1
This one is for a YZ250.
No idea how well they perform but they sure look good.
They might even have been tig brazed but I know almost fuckall about that.
I've never seen any stainless expansion chambers before but they do look bloody nice.
Ive just hit search to see who makes stuff like it and it seems Higgspeed in Blackpool makes some for old bikes but they look like the standard pipes.
Tyga on the other hand made them for quite a few bikes, RGVs, Aprilia RS250s, Cagiva Mitos, Honda NSR 250s (various versions) 350 LCs and a few others.
https://www.tygaeurope.com/index.php/by ... s.html?p=1
This one is for a YZ250.
No idea how well they perform but they sure look good.
-
- Posts: 11236
- Joined: Mon Mar 16, 2020 6:40 pm
- Location: The road of many manky motorcycles
- Has thanked: 607 times
- Been thanked: 4125 times
Re: ULTIMATE RD: YAMAHA RD400 RESTOMOD
Everyone of those welds is going to put a ridge inside the expansion chamber, a pressed seam welded pipe would work better.
Though it must be cheaper to make them like this because I just had a look at Jim Lomas's web page and his downpipes now have a lot more welds in them than the set I bought in 1990.
Though it must be cheaper to make them like this because I just had a look at Jim Lomas's web page and his downpipes now have a lot more welds in them than the set I bought in 1990.
Honda Owner
-
- Posts: 3037
- Joined: Mon Mar 16, 2020 9:30 pm
- Location: Less that 50 miles away from Moscow, but which one?
- Has thanked: 1350 times
- Been thanked: 1726 times
Re: ULTIMATE RD: YAMAHA RD400 RESTOMOD
Dunno, I've done a very limited bit of pipe welding for a company called Press which ended up being used for BNFL yonks ago and done right the internal bead was virtually buggerall, plus you can dress it with a die grinder or even sander as you're not welding the whole thing up in massive sections.Le_Fromage_Grande wrote: ↑Sun Mar 28, 2021 9:43 am Everyone of those welds is going to put a ridge inside the expansion chamber, a pressed seam welded pipe would work better.
Though it must be cheaper to make them like this because I just had a look at Jim Lomas's web page and his downpipes now have a lot more welds in them than the set I bought in 1990.
It should be about as neat on the inside as the outside if the welder knows his (or her) stuff.
To have a massive hanging root weld is a fail for the inspection process on thicker wall pipes like I was doing and I can't see if being much different on thin wall.
Some of the other more production pipes are pressed (well, damn nearly all) then welded up and some are hydroformed with all the bends in one plane, then cut and then rotated so the corners conform to the shape of the bike and then welded up in that shape.
A plumbers hydro test pump is sometimes used to pump them to initial shape.
-
- Posts: 13976
- Joined: Mon Mar 16, 2020 7:57 pm
- Location: Milton Keynes
- Has thanked: 2552 times
- Been thanked: 6262 times
Re: ULTIMATE RD: YAMAHA RD400 RESTOMOD
We used to do a fair bit of hydroforming for motorsport exhausts, as you say it's quite common to do a kind of 'cut and shut' where you form some funky sections on a straight pipe than cut it and stick it back together to get the corners.
Some of the stuff was a right mix of traditional bent, hydroformed, 3D printed, machined from solid and fabricated from flat sheet, all in one manifold.
Some of the stuff was a right mix of traditional bent, hydroformed, 3D printed, machined from solid and fabricated from flat sheet, all in one manifold.
- Taipan
- Posts: 13970
- Joined: Sat Mar 14, 2020 1:48 pm
- Location: Essex Riviera!
- Has thanked: 15982 times
- Been thanked: 10259 times
Re: ULTIMATE RD: YAMAHA RD400 RESTOMOD
demographic wrote: ↑Sun Mar 28, 2021 9:36 am So looking at those expansion chambers, I can't see that much mention of them in the blurb but they look like stainless steel to as its more yellowish colour than chromed expansion chambers.
They might even have been tig brazed but I know almost fuckall about that.
I've never seen any stainless expansion chambers before but they do look bloody nice.
Ive just hit search to see who makes stuff like it and it seems Higgspeed in Blackpool makes some for old bikes but they look like the standard pipes.
Tyga on the other hand made them for quite a few bikes, RGVs, Aprilia RS250s, Cagiva Mitos, Honda NSR 250s (various versions) 350 LCs and a few others.
https://www.tygaeurope.com/index.php/by ... s.html?p=1
This one is for a YZ250.
No idea how well they perform but they sure look good.
Looks like my Fakerapovic!
-
- Posts: 3037
- Joined: Mon Mar 16, 2020 9:30 pm
- Location: Less that 50 miles away from Moscow, but which one?
- Has thanked: 1350 times
- Been thanked: 1726 times
Re: ULTIMATE RD: YAMAHA RD400 RESTOMOD
Found a vid of a bloke hydroforming various shapes with a pressure washer, I know a lad who made some steel signage lettering in baloon shapes using this technique a few years ago, think I'd mentioned an article I'd seen in Performance Bikes and he took it from there.
Anyway, this makes for quite a good watch IMO.
Anyway, this makes for quite a good watch IMO.
-
- Posts: 13976
- Joined: Mon Mar 16, 2020 7:57 pm
- Location: Milton Keynes
- Has thanked: 2552 times
- Been thanked: 6262 times
Re: ULTIMATE RD: YAMAHA RD400 RESTOMOD
Not watched the video, but that top left one ain't looking too clever
The expense in hydro forming comes from having a tool of course (a mould you blow into), that's what you need to get the really funky shapes. You need to take care you don't make a tool you get your bit stuck in though, but you won't be surprised to hear there's all sorts of CAD type stuff to help with that.
We messed around with 3D printing tools which seems to work.
The expense in hydro forming comes from having a tool of course (a mould you blow into), that's what you need to get the really funky shapes. You need to take care you don't make a tool you get your bit stuck in though, but you won't be surprised to hear there's all sorts of CAD type stuff to help with that.
We messed around with 3D printing tools which seems to work.
-
- Posts: 3037
- Joined: Mon Mar 16, 2020 9:30 pm
- Location: Less that 50 miles away from Moscow, but which one?
- Has thanked: 1350 times
- Been thanked: 1726 times
Re: ULTIMATE RD: YAMAHA RD400 RESTOMOD
Thing with it is you inflate it and if or when water escapes you drain it, heat it til the waters out and weld that bad seam up and maybe fill it with water, make sure theres no air in then continue inflating it til its hopefully the right shape.Mr. Dazzle wrote: ↑Sun Mar 28, 2021 3:39 pm Not watched the video, but that top left one ain't looking too clever
The expense in hydro forming comes from having a tool of course (a mould you blow into), that's what you need to get the really funky shapes. You need to take care you don't make a tool you get your bit stuck in though, but you won't be surprised to hear there's all sorts of CAD type stuff to help with that.
We messed around with 3D printing tools which seems to work.
Doing it into a die will be far more repeatable I guess and you wouldn't get me even close to anyone trying to pump it up with air.