Vespa T5 MALOSSI 172cc BGM Original Cylinder Head Spacer Gasket - 1.0mm

Vespa T5 MALOSSI 172cc BGM Original Cylinder Head Spacer Gasket - 1.0mm

Product code: BD17917
Sale price£9.99

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Pickup available at 2QL Pyewipe Road Usually ready in 4 hours

Vespa T5 MALOSSI 172cc BGM Original Cylinder Head Spacer Gasket - 1.0mm

2QL Pyewipe Road

Pickup available, usually ready in 4 hours

2QL Pyewipe Road
Unit 1
Grimsby DN31 2QL
United Kingdom

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Beedspeed Ltd
Unit 1, Pyewipe Road
Grimsby
DN31 2QL
United Kingdom
 
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Vespa T5 MALOSSI 172cc BGM Original Cylinder Head Spacer Gasket - 1.0mm

If a crankshaft with more stroke is used, this additional stroke must also be compensated for two reasons. On the one hand because of the mechanical conditions to prevent the piston from hitting or the engine from running with too high compression, on the other hand to keep the control angles of the cylinder, which determine the performance, within reasonable limits.

If the stroke is extended, the control angles are also extended. This means that the scavenging channels in the cylinder (overflow and exhaust channel) are open longer. On the one hand this is very good to generate more power, but on the other hand it can also backfire if the head angles are no longer within a reasonable range or if the remaining components no longer support the achievable speed.

 

The head angles change most if the additional stroke is compensated at the cylinder base. With a stroke increase from 52mm to 55mm, i.e. 3mm, 1.5mm would have to be underlaid at the foot OR head here. So no 3mm compensation seal is used but only 1,5mm because the piston moves 1,5mm up AND down.

Now 1,5mm is underlaid at the base, due to the angle function of the crank drive, the overflow time increases disproportionately to the exhaust angle. Both angles, overflow and outlet angle, should however always be in proportion to each other for a well-functioning flush. The outlet channel should always open for a certain time before the overflow channels to give the old gases enough time to escape and make room for the incoming fresh gas. If the function of this process, known as the pre-exhaust angle, is disturbed by a too high overflow angle (or an exhaust angle that is too short in relation to the overflow angle), the power delivery in the upper speed range will be massively disturbed. Then the best exhaust system simply doesn't work anymore because it lacks the surface to breathe. If the exhaust is a real racing exhaust that only makes music in the upper speed range, this is usually accompanied by a pronounced lack of power in the lower speed range. So the engine would be slower than an original engine, despite more stroke and expensive exhaust, because the exhaust steals the torque from below and the cylinder cannot deliver it from above.

So you have to aim for a value between 23°-32° for the forward exhaust angle. The smaller the angle, the less purge loss the cylinder has, but also correspondingly less power in the upper rpm range. On the other hand, a large pre-exhaust angle is perfect to support high performance exhaust systems, but carries the risk of losing a lot of power in the lower speed range.

For the beginning it is therefore usually more recommendable to compensate the extra stroke at the cylinder head to avoid too high a change of the head angle.

If a compensation at the cylinder base is desired, which is usually easier to realize with water-cooled engines, the exhaust angle often has to be adjusted mechanically, i.e. the exhaust must be milled to achieve the desired forward exhaust angle.
However, depending on the cylinder type, this requires skill, tools and know-how.

 

For this purpose, it is just as essential to calibrate the control angle as it is to subsequently adjust the ignition angle and the carburetor spraying.



cylinder head gasket -BGM PRO- 1,0mm Malossi 172ccm T5 (aluminium)

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All our orders are 100% secure. We know this because our e-commerce system is Level 1 PCI compliant and uses 128 bit SSL encryption to ensure credit card data is secure.

Which is the same level of encryption used by large banks around the world.