Blurr wrote::roll: Do you know anything at all about the bike you bought. Try read at least one spec review.
As Wattie said
I’d like a dollar for every Web page and forum on Zx10r I’ve read over the past few weeks.
Nothing about Ram Air here..
http://www.bikez.com/motorcycles/kawasa ... r_2010.phpThis one mentions RAM Air..but doesnt explain what it is and how it works.
http://www.topspeed.com/motorcycles/mot ... 80090.htmlI have to say I’m not right into the Technical specification of my bike and I’m guess you don’t need to be a rocket scientist to know all about the Zx10.
I was just wondering where did Kawasaki get there information from. (ie 200+ HP)
If I’m not correct the question was more about Ram Air and not my bike specification.
This is the type if information I was looking for ?".(Which wattie Explained very well "when your bike is doing 200kmh+ the air is rammed into the airbox faster than the engine can suck it in, acting like a turbo so to speak.") cheers thanks for that
Maybe I should have asked a more direct question, like "How does RAM AIR effect a motorcycle?".
Here is the Technical meaning for RAM Air;
A ram-air intake is any intake design which uses the dynamic air pressure created by vehicle motion to increase the static air pressure inside of the intake manifold on an engine, thus allowing a greater massflow through the engine and hence increasing engine power.
The ram air intake works by reducing the intake air velocity by increasing the cross sectional area of the intake ducting. When gas velocity goes down the dynamic pressure is reduced while the static pressure is increased. The increased static pressure in the plenum chamber has a positive effect on engine power, both because of the pressure itself and the increased air density this higher pressure gives.
Ram-air systems are used on high performance vehicles, most often on motorcycles and race cars. Ram-air has been a feature on some cars since the late sixties, but fell out of favor in the seventies, and has only recently made a comeback. Modern parachutes use a ram-air system to pressurize a series of cells to provide the aerofoil shape.
At low speeds (subsonic speeds) increases in static pressure are however limited to a few percent. Given that the air velocity is reduced to zero without losses the pressure increase can be calculated according. The lack of losses also means without heating the air. Thus a ram-air intake also is a cold air intake. In some cars the intake is placed behind the radiator, where not only the air is hot, but the pressure is below ambient pressure. The ram-air intake effect may be small, but so are other mild tuning techniques to increase cylinder filling like using larger, fresh air filters, high flow mass flow sensors, velocity stacks, tuned air box and large tubes from the filter to the engine.
Cheers.