Cycle News

Cycle News 2016 Issue 34 August 30

Cycle News is a weekly magazine that covers all aspects of motorcycling including Supercross, Motocross and MotoGP as well as new motorcycles

Issue link: https://magazine.cyclenews.com/i/720681

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P102 F E A T U R E Sponsored THE FOUR-STROKE/ TWO-STROKE WARS Remember when debates raged about which fundamental design would prove superior for Grand Prix racing, four-stroke engines or two-strokes? We're not talking 2002, when rule changes gave manufacturers the option of running two-stroke engines of 500cc or less or four-strokes up to 990cc in their GP machines. That deck was loaded in favor of the four- strokes, and morphed into the MotoGP era we have today. Rather, we're talking about the middle 1960s, when that key question turned into a technological battle between two-stroke and four-stroke 125cc race bikes. No special allocations or dispensations allowed—just bring your best eighth-liter bike to the track and we'll settle things at the checkered flag. In 1961, 1962 and 1964, Honda four-strokes won three 125cc world titles, but by the middle 1960s two-strokes had evolved into an undeniable force. Debates surrounding engine design had real merit: In a two-stroke engine every crankshaft rotation yields a power stroke, while four-strokes produce power only upon every other crankshaft rotation— one rotation is "wasted" pushing out gasses. There is no shortcut here; to produce equal power in a four-stroke, engine speeds must increase substantially. The obvious answer to this dilemma was to create an engine with more cylinders. But they would have to be tiny bores combined with an extremely short stroke to allow ultra- high engine speeds—all of which invited disaster given the materials and technology of the day. But Honda did it.

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