The triangulation has to be viewed for the complete frame. Forces are transferred axially along the tubes because tubular axial stiffness is high, even through bends. Transverse stiffness is low.But… I don’t see the mk3 as being well triangulated. There is a point at which the headstock triangulation and main frame triangulation meet (red arrow in pic below) and at that point there is no triangulation.
what are the input forces to the frame that you are starting with?The triangulation has to be viewed for the complete frame. Forces are transferred axially along the tubes because tubular axial stiffness is high, even through bends. Transverse stiffness is low.
At the indicated joint, the sloped tubes create an inward force (towards the frame C/L) while the horizontal tubes create an opposite outward force, in equilibrium with the former. Thus, the triangular force diagram is maintained.
Partial weight of the powerplant has to be introduced at this joint. The gravity forces are decomposed into a force component acting downward at the sloped tubes, and a component acting forward at the horizontal tubes.
Both components will reduce the respective static chassis loads, which is beneficial.
- Knut
Generalized chassis loads. The absolute load size is not important (decomposition can be dimensionless), but if you ask med for a figure, I will assume a gravity load of 90 kg*g = 883 Newton, fluids included.what are the input forces to the frame that you are starting with?
I did not loan my Seeley 850 to Bill Horsman. I asked him about the handling of the Jerry Kooistra Mk3 Seeley G50 before I rode my Seeley 850. He said that when he pushed the Seeley G50 really hard, he could feel the front move. I have never felt that with my Seeley 850. It makes most other bikes look stupid. When I come out of corners that fast, it takes a really fast 1000cc four cylinder bike to beat it to the end of the next straight - and if they get there first, it usually does not matter. My regret is that I will probably never get to race again. In road racing and life generally, many people are defeated by their own mindsets. The Seeley 850 has a methanol-fuelled 850cc engine - it has to do something when all the bits work together. Being defeatist is bullshit. When some guys get blown to the weeds on a straight, it knocks their backside in - 'patience is a virtue'. With any racing motorcycle, we do not know what it can do until we work with it. The first time it is raced, it will always go backwards. The first time the Seeley 850 was raced, I gave it to my mate to ride, so he had the problems. I am not stupid.Hi Al look at my first photos in this post, it is very easy to fit a side stand to a Seeley Mk3 frame. The Maney 2 into 1 & the one built in New Zealand by Brooking 850 have the same length primary. No the Mk2 does not have the same problem as a featherbed again look at a photo of my Mk4 it's as far forward as you can get it & the pipes dont get in the way of the frame tubes. The Mk3 frame does flex lol you cant have an engine out front like that & there not be flex. Your superior head steady & your ladder help but you have stated that you loaned the bike out & the rider said he 'felt' it move. Other than being petite, Seeley frames & Commando engines just go together & pretty much everything works & they always have done.
The G50 might have been lighter in the front, but what happens with handling usually happens at the opposite end to where it feels to be. If the damping of the rear shocks is insufficient, it is usually felt as though it is because of the front jumping around. Bill Horsman was not a beginner. He raced once on the IOM and won the Junior Clubman's TT with an Aermacchi 350. Most people have never seen him race. He stopped racing after a guy rode a bike out of a gate on the back of Mount Gambier circuit. He hit it with an RG00 Suzuki and broke both of his legs. He was sponsored by Cornell Suzuki in Adelaide.So swap out a G50 single for a 850 Commando lump. I think that answers the question.