banshee#1 Posted April 23, 2006 Report Posted April 23, 2006 hey i have a banshee with single carb kit 33mm. ino i should have got 35mm but didnt so now im stuck with them unless i buy something else im getting a port job should i keep em or sell em nd get somethign esle if i keep the 33's how will they work ? good or .... thanks Quote
CadillacBanshee Posted April 23, 2006 Report Posted April 23, 2006 What kind of port work is it and what kind of riding do you do? Quote
banshee#1 Posted April 23, 2006 Author Report Posted April 23, 2006 i do all around riding, tails, open areas, street in the snow, a lil of everything and the port im getting is a aggressive play Quote
NYUK Posted April 23, 2006 Report Posted April 23, 2006 to really feel the affects of the port job i would say duals.i know the single hits like mad out of the hole, but peters out on top.i`m from the school theres nothing a single can do ,duals can t do better, pipes, carbs, air filter. Quote
Wallrat Posted April 24, 2006 Report Posted April 24, 2006 I would try it out first. I'm the opposite of Nyuk, I think that singles are the better way to go for everybody but draggers. If that 33 doesn't perform like you want, then check ebay. I got a 35pwk for $60 shipped from there. Quote
rocketboy Posted April 24, 2006 Report Posted April 24, 2006 i m a firm beliver in duals are much better than singles on a she ,if yo u wanna gain lowend raise your static compression and/or increase your ignition timing ,choking down your intakes cfm is no way to make additional lowend torque IMO . whyrob peter to pay paul when you can have both ? definitly on a ported banshee duals are the only way to roll IMO Quote
Wallrat Posted April 24, 2006 Report Posted April 24, 2006 Low end gains aren't the onlly benefit of running a single: -My jetting changes take me less than a minute, including time to find my tools. -My engine bay is cleaner, so I can do more without removing filters/carbs. -I never burn anything on my stingers. -I'm always syncronized -Single cylinder troubleshooting definately isn't the carbs -I got a spare k&n for free when i switched to a single -My throttle response is 2nd to none -Only need to buy 1 of each size jet -I don't get holes in my outerwears - ever Quote
1000dollabill Posted April 24, 2006 Report Posted April 24, 2006 Low end gains aren't the onlly benefit of running a single: -My jetting changes take me less than a minute, including time to find my tools. -My engine bay is cleaner, so I can do more without removing filters/carbs. -I never burn anything on my stingers. -I'm always syncronized -Single cylinder troubleshooting definately isn't the carbs -I got a spare k&n for free when i switched to a single -My throttle response is 2nd to none -Only need to buy 1 of each size jet -I don't get holes in my outerwears - ever 506818[/snapback] I absolutely concur! Quote
lowriderb Posted April 24, 2006 Report Posted April 24, 2006 since your not really trying to ride the bike like a 4 stroke, stick with the 33's until you feel that a bigger carb set up would benifit you more.. imo dual 26mm carbs are pretty small for a naturally aspirated 350 (in pretty much stock form) (52mm's total area),so how is one single 35mm carb enough.. with a good tune on dual carbs they will have very crisp throttle response, and if you get the right size carbs for your application you will get better results with the motor your trying to build.. if you wash your bike the motor will stay clean.. sync'ing carbs isnt rocket science.. you pull the filters off and adjust them till the both open at the same time and all the way.. i dont get holes in my outerwares either..i run out of frame pipes..lol Quote
banshee#1 Posted April 25, 2006 Author Report Posted April 25, 2006 how much more will dual 35's help me Quote
FIRST BANSHEE Posted May 1, 2006 Report Posted May 1, 2006 you already have the single, try and if it doesn't run the why you like switch to duals. single is easier all the way around. Quote
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