I am thinking its a Pup motor. Start one pull at the beginning of the day, then just push the handlebar clutch lever to start the main!!
Pup motor also warms coolant so no cold starts on Main engine.
Doo thinks shot is something!!
the base stock of the ho is no different than the 2008. same bore, same stroke, different valve config and electric oil pump. thicker cyl skirts but really the ho is nothing new by a long shot.I don't see why Polaris would drop the HO after 3 seasons. Adding a new motor 3 years after? Even if it was the heavily rumoured triple, which I think means there is no triple as anything that is talked about takes a few years. And direction injection? Again they will likely stick with the current HO platform.
Anything they do is going to be an upgrade to the existing HO. Longer stroke, turbo, whatever.
There is a chance it's something completely new and in a few days we will know but typically Polaris relies heavily on the input of its big name guys like Burandt. And is he asking for anything but a factory turbo?
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I may be just trolling around but what engines are these? old yammi triple vs polaris twin?
View attachment 203345
Not sure what the point of that would be, so Polaris builds a G4, how would that convince someone who already has a G4 to switch over? Because it's lighter? But would it be if they had to add a wider track,bigger boards and some sort of T-motion clone? Like someone else said, the needs to be some sort of differentiation between the manufacturers sleds or you could only sell them your version based on price and colour.
the base stock of the ho is no different than the 2008. same bore, same stroke, different valve config and electric oil pump. thicker cyl skirts but really the ho is nothing new by a long shot.
Good one but Your aging yourself!!!! Just sayin....
they switched from mape to fuji in 12/13. same crank design, pipe is not part of the engine, mapping is totally out of the equation, motor mounts(who gives a ****), and whats different in the porting? enlighten me! the piston is identical to the old piston also but has some oil retaining grooves on the exhaust side. i could care less about what cat or doo has because i own polaris.Different crank, pipe, mapping, motor mounts, porting etc. I would say a whole new engine with the same bore and stroke. If the bore and stroke was the same as the e-tec or Cat motor would you say it is the same motor as found in one of these?
they switched from mape to fuji in 12/13. same crank design, pipe is not part of the engine, mapping is totally out of the equation, motor mounts(who gives a ****), and whats different in the porting? enlighten me! the piston is identical to the old piston also but has some oil retaining grooves on the exhaust side. i could care less about what cat or doo has because i own polaris.
The more you know.Well just because you know everything already...
the CFI-4 in 2008-2010 port timing specs were the most radical of the three iterations, making around 154 HP with fuel leaned out with a DTR Power Commander map. But there was the inconsistent compression/combustion pressure control of the exhaust valves. Anytime one or more valves would be late opening during light acceleration, excessive airflow could occur and the air/fuel mixture could become leaner, creating possible detonation or lean surging and misfire.
The 2011 the CFI-2 version had much milder port timing, which created better part throttle compression pressure to open the exhaust valves promptly and more consistently. The milder port timing and revised valve timing made midrange airflow more consistent regardless if the exhaust valves were open or closed when commanded. So with the CFI-2 800, the dreaded midrange lean condition was eliminated, but unfortunately power was down roughly 8-10 HP from the CFI-4 800.
For 2015, the new 800 H.O, the exhaust valves are strictly controlled by an electronic stepper motor, and valving is expanded to cover not only the main exhaust port, but also the secondary ‘boost’ or ‘sub exhaust’ ports adjacent to the main exhaust port. The main exhaust port valve is a ‘double stack’ allowing the exhaust port height to be lower at low RPM, and at light throttle opening. At WOT (wide open throttle) the valves are fully closed from idle to 5200RPM, where they snap to ½ open. Then, at 7200 RPM they open fully resulting in smooth, torquey operation through the entire HP band.
Displacement stays the same at 795cc, but a new crankshaft is 2.5 pounds lighter, and a new piston/chrome ring package needs lots of break-in time to seal properly. Typical ‘moly’ rings seat well against nickasil bore quickly, but the chrome rings used in the 800 H.O. need time, load and extra oil to do the same.
So some could get porting and port timing mixed up easy enough. And saying the crank is the same design yet it's 2.5lbs lighter is pulling hairs.
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This is almost as bad as an 850 thread.
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It was yesterday !!Maybe the 166 Track is back!!
I can guess all day! Haha!!
Nice breakdown. Just a couple of question the second version still had some issues life spans of 1300 k to 5000. I personally have only observed one go down with the lower k .though.Well just because you know everything already...
the CFI-4 in 2008-2010 port timing specs were the most radical of the three iterations, making around 154 HP with fuel leaned out with a DTR Power Commander map. But there was the inconsistent compression/combustion pressure control of the exhaust valves. Anytime one or more valves would be late opening during light acceleration, excessive airflow could occur and the air/fuel mixture could become leaner, creating possible detonation or lean surging and misfire.
The 2011 the CFI-2 version had much milder port timing, which created better part throttle compression pressure to open the exhaust valves promptly and more consistently. The milder port timing and revised valve timing made midrange airflow more consistent regardless if the exhaust valves were open or closed when commanded. So with the CFI-2 800, the dreaded midrange lean condition was eliminated, but unfortunately power was down roughly 8-10 HP from the CFI-4 800.
For 2015, the new 800 H.O, the exhaust valves are strictly controlled by an electronic stepper motor, and valving is expanded to cover not only the main exhaust port, but also the secondary ‘boost’ or ‘sub exhaust’ ports adjacent to the main exhaust port. The main exhaust port valve is a ‘double stack’ allowing the exhaust port height to be lower at low RPM, and at light throttle opening. At WOT (wide open throttle) the valves are fully closed from idle to 5200RPM, where they snap to ½ open. Then, at 7200 RPM they open fully resulting in smooth, torquey operation through the entire HP band.
Displacement stays the same at 795cc, but a new crankshaft is 2.5 pounds lighter, and a new piston/chrome ring package needs lots of break-in time to seal properly. Typical ‘moly’ rings seat well against nickasil bore quickly, but the chrome rings used in the 800 H.O. need time, load and extra oil to do the same.
So some could get porting and port timing mixed up easy enough. And saying the crank is the same design yet it's 2.5lbs lighter is pulling hairs.
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