wonky wrote a bit further up:
Lightening parts will add less resistance within the engines moving components, less vibration and will help with picking up the revs. Losing weight helps with higher speed and acceleration...
Exactly what I meant!
and then went on to write following my posting:
Bill but lightening the Flywheel/Freewheel doesn't increase BHP.
I did not mean to imply it does - of course it doesn't, but that doesn't deter from the fact that the mass of the flywheel etc does use power when it is accelerated. BHP is measured on the brake at more less constant revs; once at speed to flywheel doesn't need that power to be moved, on the contrary it could even aid in giving a eversoslightly higher rating since its mass also stores some of that power it needed to be accelerated.
The point ist - see wonky's quote above - that the lightened parts accelerate faster, need less power to do so and so also need less gas to do so. This has been tested. And of course when the rider takes advantage of the better performance he is NOT going to get beter mileage. I wrote
the bike also need less gas for the same kind of riding.
Then the
lurching twitchy throttle reponse
can't be used as an excuse. There is no excuse for not learning to control that right hand. The CV carb is of course no help since it allows heavyhandedness without punishment. Change to a flatslide and quickturn grip... Or perhaps "go back to school" with a classic high-performance 2-stroke with that narrow on/off band. My Tour will idle at 850rpm if need be - with that lightened flywheel assembly and no counterbalancer. Of course there is no reason or purpose for such a low idle in real life riding.
I have done this modification to several bikes with the XTZ engine, some tuned (lightly as well heavily; my racer has no flywheel at all, much less a starter and a much lightened crank and no counter balancer but has the least vibrations of any engine I have built) and a couple not at all, including my own SZR, a stock Tour and another stock Replica. Both the Replica rider, a motorcycle journalist, and the Tour rider reported independently that the bikes were noticably quicker to ride and needed less gas. What can I say? At the time I did it to my own Tour, it was not tuned either, but the counterbalancer had been removed. I ride the thing that way and have done so for the last 45000km.