Yamaha ThunderAce as a kit car engine.
Yamaha ThunderAce as a kit car engine.
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Discussion

Dr Derek Doctors

Original Poster:

8,422 posts

217 months

Thursday 2nd September 2010
quotequote all
As said in the title really.

I have been offered a ThunderAce engine (YZF1000R) at a very reasonable price (half that of an R1) by a reputable engine dealer and I'm seriously considering using it for my Aries Motorsport Bike engine car build.

Does anyone have any ideas/knowledge/experience/reasoned opinion on using these engines for kit car applications? I appreciate that they only have a 5 speed box but that is the only real negative I can find.

Any help appreciated.

Adam205

821 posts

206 months

Thursday 2nd September 2010
quotequote all
I would talk to Steve about it as he'll be able to advise best, but i wouldn't have thought it would be a problem getting it fitted. I can't see any obvious issues, the FZR1000 engine (on which the thunderace engine is based i believe) used to be pretty popular!

The GSXR1100 engine I have in my Aries only has 5 gears and manages it fine due to the excellent mid range. The Thunderace engine is a similarly torquey engine with good mid range so 6 speeds just mean you have to change gear more often!

Edited by Adam205 on Thursday 2nd September 21:02

Dr Derek Doctors

Original Poster:

8,422 posts

217 months

Thursday 2nd September 2010
quotequote all
yeah thats more or less what I was thinking, it seems to be praised for its low down grunt which would be beneficial in a kit car.

Really I need to know if there are any issues with things like lubrication, cooling, weak gearboxs or anything else that may trip up the build.

Adam205

821 posts

206 months

Thursday 2nd September 2010
quotequote all
Generally older bike engines are much less sensitive. Tolerances were lower so things were made beefier, and they're much less sensitive the the environment they're running in. I would be very surprised if you had any issues. The usual precautions such as an oil baffle plate and uprated pressure switch mightn't be a bad plan, also finding out whether it's hydraulic or cable clutch as slave cylinders can make things a bit awkward (it does on GSXR1100 engines anyway!).

Adam205

821 posts

206 months

Thursday 2nd September 2010
quotequote all
I was going to suggest asking on LB, but a quick search suggests you already have smile

Richardsix

151 posts

188 months

Thursday 2nd September 2010
quotequote all
Dont know about fitting it in a car, but had the bike................damn good lump, bullet-proof as long as you do usual maintanence.

andygtt

8,345 posts

288 months

Friday 3rd September 2010
quotequote all
the sump is the issue, is it baffled in a way that will be able to cope with the different way a car handles without oil starvation.... I beleive the busa cant which is why its so expensive to fit a busa to a car as you need dry sump on top of the engine.

Dr Derek Doctors

Original Poster:

8,422 posts

217 months

Friday 3rd September 2010
quotequote all
andygtt said:
the sump is the issue, is it baffled in a way that will be able to cope with the different way a car handles without oil starvation.... I beleive the busa cant which is why its so expensive to fit a busa to a car as you need dry sump on top of the engine.
Well this is the big question... and the one that I can't find an answer to yet.

antnicuk

351 posts

212 months

Friday 3rd September 2010
quotequote all
i have a thunderace. its basically the early R1 engine and it made the same power on the dyno. 135 rwhp so about 150 at the fly. Mine has a dyno jt kit and the exup valve removed. Not sure if you would keep this on a kit car. It does affect low down torque a little which isnt too bad on a bike but might be in a car with the wrong diff ratio.

The clutch is hydraulic. They like a drop of oil also! I cant help with the sump, sorry

Adam205

821 posts

206 months

Friday 3rd September 2010
quotequote all
andygtt said:
the sump is the issue, is it baffled in a way that will be able to cope with the different way a car handles without oil starvation.... I beleive the busa cant which is why its so expensive to fit a busa to a car as you need dry sump on top of the engine.
Not entirely true. The busa has a tiny oil capacity for a large engine (3.1 litres), you can improve things by fitting a larger baffled wet sump. For comparison my GSXR1100 engine takes 5 litres. A quick google reveals that the thunderace has an oil capacity of 4 litres, which isn't bad for a 1000cc engine and would indicate that you're unlikely to have any major problems (obviously no guarantee). As long as you fit a baffle plate and a slight overfill i'd do it.