The Seeley 850 Commando that Jim Schmidt (JS Motorsports) refers to in his youtube link was built by me. There is nothing exotic in the engine. A pair of MAP rods (as Bruno, the owner wanted them), std pistons and a reworked Hemmings head with big valve conversion. The cam is a PW3, carbs are Keihin FCR´s. This winter it got a steel flywheel of my own manufacture for extra safety. Thats about it. I don´t buy those 76 hp, dynojet rolling roads are known here for their "optimism". Neverless - that engine is really a lot quicker than an ordinary 850. The new engine that I built for Bruno has indeed the JS parts in it: rods, pistons, cam and followers. The barrel is from Steve Maney. It got one of my chopped steel flywheels which is a lot lighter. Anyway - Bruno is happy with the result but so far the engine hasn´t been dynoed. My own 905 produced 80 hp at the crank on a SCHENK dyno a while ago - the Schenk is calibrated twice a year and is known to be highly accurate. We have 4 more cams to test and have to play a lot with different exhausts / inlets but I guess we should have around 85 reliable hp this coming summer. Unfortunately this 905 engine is so far away from a std Norton that it will not be possible to plug and play with the parts that we use: Heavily modified crank (90mm stroke) with all balance mass in the outer webs and a 3rd bearing, new left crankcase half, homebuilt rods at 379gr each, 80mm pistons complete with rings and pin at 234 gr each :mrgreen: There is a homebuilt oilpump in it that has more than 3 times the capacity of the Norton pump as we use several oil jets to cool pistons and head etc. We had it up to 7000 several times without any problems, as soon as we still gain some power with another cam above 7000 we will take it up to 8000 as thats the calculated max revs for our parts. If that engine doesn´t grenade on the Schenk in the next few weeks we will built a 6 speeder for it as it will probably destroy all other gearboxes. I think the TTI could stand it but I want to have a different clutch with a bearing in the middle of the drivebelt, just like the crank has - thus no deflection of shaft(s) - no matter what power goes through.
Cheers Hartmut