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My supercharged K8 project...

131750 Views 192 Replies 85 Participants Last post by  D.Man



The bike pictured above is my bone stock K8. A friend gave me a fantastic deal on this bike last year, and it has just under 2000 miles on the clock. I love this bike for the same reasons everyone does -- incredibly smooth, extremely capable and controllable, great power, and fantastic ergonomics for a supersport machine. The local Dynojet 250i says it puts down 152whp (SAE corrected), which is actually more power than a full-exhaust, PCIII-tuned '04 ZX-10R produced on the same dyno.


Now, normally the next step would be to add an exhaust, change the gearing around, or add some braided lines, and while I'll eventually get to those mods, I have something different in mind right now...





It's a Rotrex C15-60 supercharger, right off the plane from Denmark. This little unit can support over 230whp, and that's the number I'll be shooting for with my little project here. Also, the impeller wheel used to be cast, but these new wheels are apparently machined out of billet.


Before you ask, yes, I am a power junkie. There's just no going back once you've ridden a boosted literbike...





You can see how small it actually is compared to the bike. Somehow, some way, it will fit in there...





After staring at this sight for a couple of days, I realized the only place to put this thing is in-between the engine and the radiator, just below the frame. I'd love to stick it up higher, but the frame would get in the way of the belt (which is a dealbreaker) and the radiator fan would also have to be relocated. Placing it lower eliminates these problems, but makes it much harder to hide the drive behind the fairings and also places the inlet of the Rotrex very close to the header. I also do not want cornering clearance to be compromised at all, so it will be in as far (and up as high) as possible.





If anyone is wondering how I plan on driving this thing, take a look at the picture above. The M10 bolt currently fastened into the end of the crank will be removed and a machined adapter will take its place (this adapter has to locate perfectly off the crankshaft for this to work). A pulley will sit on top of this adapter and then drive the supercharger via an 8mm synchronous belt. The supercharger bracket will either take the place of the stock cast cover or locate off of it -- I'm not exactly sure yet which way to go.



There's a lot of work left to be done, but I'm looking forward to it. I plan on tuning the ECU directly and, of course, it will run on pump gas. In the meantime, wish me luck, and stay tuned...
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but my goal is to use as many of the original parts as possible.

Hi Toro,now that you mentioned it,are you are going to use ecueditor to flash the stock ECU since it can control fuel vs boost,retard the timing etc etc?

Keep up the good work! :cheers
Yep. Actually, while I have downloaded and played with the ecueditor software, I'm going to be working with Guhl Motors for the tuning. I've spoken to Don and he really knows his stuff, so I think I'll be able to do exactly what I want with the stock ECU.

I'm thinking about generating a couple different maps (that can hopefully be assigned to the stock ABC power switch); one which will allow me full power for hooligan antics and general around town riding, and one which will allow full throttle while keeping the front end on the ground (the best that it can, anyway). The timing and secondary throttle plate control on a per gear basis should be the key to making it work...

I don't know about ABC,but you can easily make 2 sets of maps including fuel,ignition,secondary plates etc,and change between them on the fly by grounding or not pin 66 via a toggle switch...

From what I've read on other discussions,setting the injectors to spray on 50-50 basis gives you the most amount of fuel you can get out of the stock injectors,and if combined with an increased fuel pressure ( 4 bar? ) you might not need to change the stock pump...

Anyway,keep up the good work! :cheers
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