Αποτελέσματα Αναζήτησης
17 Νοε 2024 · Motorcycle speed and sprocket calculator with bike database for gearing, sprockets, tires and chains of over 1900 bikes. Request yours to be added as well.
- DNS Sinkhole
DNS Sinkhole - Gearing Commander - Motorcycle Speed and...
- Same Tooth
Same Tooth - Gearing Commander - Motorcycle Speed and Drive...
- Gc: Ad Block Policy
Gc: Ad Block Policy - Gearing Commander - Motorcycle Speed...
- RPM Deviation Chart
RPM Deviation Chart - Gearing Commander - Motorcycle Speed...
- Decide on Smaller Front
Decide on Smaller Front - Gearing Commander - Motorcycle...
- New Version Alert
New Version Alert - Gearing Commander - Motorcycle Speed and...
- Chain and Sprockets
Chain and Sprockets - Gearing Commander - Motorcycle Speed...
- RPM Matrix for All 3 Setups
RPM Matrix for All 3 Setups - Gearing Commander - Motorcycle...
- DNS Sinkhole
This program calculates the gear ratios of a motorcycle. The primary drive ratio and overall ratios for each gear are all calculated. Just enter the data in the white boxes below, then click the "Calculate" Button. Pressing the "Reset" button loads the default values into the form.
Enter gear ratios, primary ratio, sprocket sizes and tire diameter, then drag RPM slider to calculate speed from RPM. Drag Max RPM slider to adjust the range of the RPM and Speedometer Gauges.
Gearing Commander Belt Drive Bike Calculations. As of version 6.5.x the Gearing Commander also supports calculations for Belt drive bikes. Before there also were belt drive bikes entered in the database but without the chain specifications as these bikes had belts.
Enter gear ratios, tire and diff ratio to analyze RPM vs velocity at shift points with tracer
This page has motorcycle setup sheets and downloads that are useful for keeping track of your chassis setup and give you some direction on making changes. The setup sheets are in pdf and Excel format, while the gearing chart, rake/trail calculator and thrust chart are all in Excel format. Motorcycle Setup Sheets
When changing sprockets, you can adjust Chain Links to maintain (nearest to) current Sprocket Centers (eg: to keep motorcycle rear wheel within adjustment range). Check Lock Centers and adjust sprockets - Chain links will adjust to maintain nearest to current Sprocket Centers.