RE: 'Busa Kit for Cars
RE: 'Busa Kit for Cars
Thursday 11th December 2008

'Busa Kit for Cars

New conversion kit better suited to four wheels



It’s about to get a lot easier to drop a lightweight Hayabusa motorcycle lump into your new track day project.

US engineering firm Hartley has announced a billet aluminium crankcase conversion kit designed to be mated to an automotive-type gearbox. Hartley says this is an advantage over the motorcycle gearboxes used in many ’Busa engine transplants, which are generally chain driven and don’t have a dedicated reverse gear.

The idea is simply to mate all Suzuki’s upper engine parts to the new crankcase and, fully built, your Hartley H2 BUSA engine will weigh in at less than 64kgs. As the 1340cc in-line four can produce anything from 175 to 250bhp in normally aspirated tune, the giant-killing opportunities are obvious. Or you could bolt on a turbo kit and for an instant 100bhp power boost…

The crankcase kit will come with a 4-stage dry sump system so the crank sits just 116mm from the bottom of the engine. With a 140mm clutch, 215mm flywheel and a compact bellhousing Hartley says this means the drivetrain in a ‘7’ type car can be lowered by several inches.

Engine kits will be available in the early part of next year when prices will be announced. Hartley says the kit has been designed to be ‘affordable’.

Author
Discussion

MrKipling43

Original Poster:

5,788 posts

242 months

Thursday 11th December 2008
quotequote all
Kick. Arse.

It's about time someone did something like this.

zac510

5,546 posts

232 months

Thursday 11th December 2008
quotequote all
Very crafty! smile

russellwatson17

278 posts

214 months

Thursday 11th December 2008
quotequote all
Ha, yes! Was thinking bout garaging the mini in the not to distant future and dropping in a vtec but this looks a bit better! It'll probs cost like £100000 though....

Kozy

3,169 posts

244 months

Thursday 11th December 2008
quotequote all
I want one in a Suzuki Cappacino. Wonder how easily that can be done?

Kozy

3,169 posts

244 months

Thursday 11th December 2008
quotequote all
russellwatson17 said:
Ha, yes! Was thinking bout garaging the mini in the not to distant future and dropping in a vtec but this looks a bit better! It'll probs cost like £100000 though....
The Hartley V8 is £15k for comparison, and that is a hella lot more engineering I would guess...

cd.thomson

9 posts

210 months

Thursday 11th December 2008
quotequote all
Great idea. Who wants a sequential, lightweight six speed gearbox in their track day car anyway, which is what you'd get just using the bike box.

I would definitely want to mate my superlight, highpowered bike engine to a high cost, heavy car box which is geared to accepted high torque and low(er) revs than the bike engine puts out. Integrated reverse? Well worth it.

woof

8,456 posts

303 months

Thursday 11th December 2008
quotequote all

Didn't Caterham and Westfield have Busa powered cars for a while ?

cd.thomson

9 posts

210 months

Thursday 11th December 2008
quotequote all
prior to the Ultima setting the unofficial fastest lap round the TG circuit, the record was held jointly by a Dax Rush Se7en with a turbo hayabusa engine..

using the bike box..

obviously.

VladD

8,171 posts

291 months

Thursday 11th December 2008
quotequote all
You'll probably think I'm insane, but I'd like to drop one in the back of an X1/9 and make an Abarth look-a-like.


charlierevell

4 posts

216 months

Thursday 11th December 2008
quotequote all
I bought a BEC purely for the 'free' sequential box!
Why the hell would you want to mount it to a car box???
Only application i can see is if used transversely it would save chain drive in a riot or similar.
Making a bike engine fit in a 7 type car is easy enough as it is. You just need a prop adapter to fit on the output shaft! How hard can it be?

Engineering just for the sake of it i say!

yosamitesam

14 posts

212 months

Thursday 11th December 2008
quotequote all
woof said:
Didn't Caterham and Westfield have Busa powered cars for a while ?
just about all kit manufacturers have them

the only benefit would be a reverse gear - they would be better suited making a better quality gearbox to suit the existing set up! they are noisy and leak

i certainly wouldnt put a heavy car engine box on my busa - it will weigh the same as the engine if not more!!!!!!

and as said - you get a sequential box with 6 gears with the busa box - why would you want a normal box? the sequential is fantastically fast

cant see many people taking this up to be honest unless those buying havnt done their homework

clonmult

10,529 posts

235 months

Thursday 11th December 2008
quotequote all
VladD said:
You'll probably think I'm insane, but I'd like to drop one in the back of an X1/9 and make an Abarth look-a-like.

If that makes you insane, then I'm off me rocker as well. Top idea. Although I like the idea of keeping the X1/9 looking stock - you know, a little tatty, rough around the edge, bits of trim falling off ....

massive1

63 posts

246 months

Thursday 11th December 2008
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One in the back of a classic fiat 500 would be fantastic .

Mars

10,028 posts

240 months

Thursday 11th December 2008
quotequote all
Just how heavy do some of you guys think a car gearbox is?

Wammer

394 posts

214 months

Thursday 11th December 2008
quotequote all
This has already been done. Think about the Diablo Smart which has a hayabousa conected to the smart gearbox. It will do naught to sixty in 3.5 seconds and a top speed of 135mph. Check out this link
http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=_Pxs-dWwxaE and http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=aEdmmWb9DhQ&feat...

Skyedriver

22,788 posts

308 months

Thursday 11th December 2008
quotequote all
Mars said:
Just how heavy do some of you guys think a car gearbox is?
Classic Mini one weighs in at around 30kg IIRC

cd.thomson

9 posts

210 months

Thursday 11th December 2008
quotequote all
Mars said:
Just how heavy do some of you guys think a car gearbox is?
Heavy enough to make the whole process of fitting a superlightweight engine to your car, removing the original gearbox along with its 6 speed sequential setting and correct gearing ratios, and attaching a car box a bit stupid.

Remember you'll have to fit a sturdier box to deal with the extra performance, would the classic 30kg mini box be enough?

ceebmoj

1,899 posts

287 months

Thursday 11th December 2008
quotequote all
Kozy said:
I want one in a Suzuki Cappacino. Wonder how easily that can be done?
There is a guy that has swapped the standard cappacino engine with a suzuki engine from a snowmabeal witch I bereave is eventual the same engine but not limited to kia power specks 150bhp strikes me as a lot of fun in a car that feels responsibly fast with 60 odd.

look on the oners website for more info


Scuffers

20,887 posts

300 months

Thursday 11th December 2008
quotequote all
cd.thomson said:
Mars said:
Just how heavy do some of you guys think a car gearbox is?
Heavy enough to make the whole process of fitting a superlightweight engine to your car, removing the original gearbox along with its 6 speed sequential setting and correct gearing ratios, and attaching a car box a bit stupid.

Remember you'll have to fit a sturdier box to deal with the extra performance, would the classic 30kg mini box be enough?
whist I take your point, most mainstream production FWD box's (incluing the diff/FD) are ~30-35Kg's all in.

bigger issue is finding one that can cope with the higher rev-range this engine will have, some are going to have significant lubrication issues with the input shaft doing 10K+ Rpm

Slinky

15,704 posts

275 months

Thursday 11th December 2008
quotequote all
My lottery win silly car will make use of this perfectly..

Smart roadster coupe + that engine = WOOO HOOO