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Old 12-13-2021, 03:02 PM   #1
Lee1991   Lee1991 is offline
 
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Question Spec differences between RPS Hawk 250 and Xpro Hawk 250

Hi everyone,
I am trying to decide on my first bike and I have narrowed it down to a few options but I am bumping into a few issues. I am trying to get the most power for the money and am getting some contradictory numbers from different sites. below are some of the number I have found, Let me know what you all think.

RPS Hawk 250 DLX - 16HP and 16.5 NM of torque
X-Pro Hawk 250 DLX - 11.5HP and 16.5 NM of torque

RPS Hawk 250 - 16.1 HP and 16.5 NM of torque (a few sites do show this to have 14)
X-pro Hawk 250 - 14 HP and 16.5 NM of torque

Also debating;
X-Pro Titan DLX - 16 HP and 16.5 NM of torque
and
BSR Raven - 16HP

My understanding is that the RPS and X Pro were the same bikes? why the difference in performance numbers?

Does anyone know which bike in this price range and category has the most power or what the real power specs are without the marketing Bull from the websites.

Thanks for any help and information you have.

Lee


 
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Old 12-13-2021, 04:07 PM   #2
tknj99   tknj99 is offline
 
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I cant comment on figures but the 2 Hawk's you listed and BSR Raven all have the same CG250 engine so should all be identical. The XPro Titan has the same engine as the former RXB250L which is a CB250 overhead cam engine and should have a slightly higher hp/tq rating than the CG engine.
With that being said and being an owner of both a modded Bashan Brozz 250 (CG250 engine) as well as the Titan, i can say that the Titan in stock form is just as fast or faster than my modded Brozz and is superior for offroad riding plus is close to 40 pounds lighter.
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Old 12-13-2021, 04:19 PM   #3
tknj99   tknj99 is offline
 
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A good resource i found:

https://www.thumpertalk.com/forums/t...eference-list/
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Old 12-13-2021, 04:25 PM   #4
Lee1991   Lee1991 is offline
 
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Awesome that is exactly the information I was looking for. I was leaning that direction and just got caught up in the numbers.

Thanks


 
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Old 12-13-2021, 09:05 PM   #5
krat   krat is offline
 
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You are having difficulty with the numbers because the dealers do not understand the difference between the Imperial System, and the Metric system. You see, most of the china bike dealers are not too bright, so we have to deal with problems related to their stupidity.

Some of the websites list the 11.5 number as horsepower when it is kw and visa versa. I have also seen the NM (metric) torque numbers given as HP.

The engines are all the same, as is their power output for both watts/HP and torque in NM/foot pounds.

The real question is how was it measured? Was it measured with the choked to death carb and exhaust system complete with cat? Or was the engine measured on the bench unrestricted? Are we trying to get back up to the listed power, or are we working up from those numbers?

When you take one of these CG engines, no matter what the factory numbers were listed as, properly tune the carb and replace the exhaust it feels and acts like you are doubling the power.

Derestricting and proper tuning increased my top speed from 45mph to 60mph. Others here have had the same experience, or better.
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Last edited by krat; 01-04-2022 at 10:02 PM.
 
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Old 01-04-2022, 10:48 AM   #6
Deckard_Cain   Deckard_Cain is offline
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by krat View Post
You are having difficulty with the numbers because the dealers do not understand the difference between the Imperial System, and the Metric system. You see, most of the china bike dealers are not too bright, so we have to deal with problems related to their stupidity.

Some of the websites list the 11.5 number as horsepower when it is Watts and visa versa. I have also seen the NM (metric) torque numbers given as HP.

The engines are all the same, as is their power output for both watts/HP and torque in NM/foot pounds.

The real question is how was it measured? Was it measured with the choked to death carb and exhaust system complete with cat? Or was the engine measured on the bench unrestricted? Are we trying to get back up to the listed power, or are we working up from those numbers?

When you take one of these CG engines, no matter what the factory numbers were listed as, properly tune the carb and replace the exhaust it feels and acts like you are doubling the power.

Derestricting and proper tuning increased my top speed from 45mph to 60mph. Others here have had the same experience, or better.
11.5 can't be the power in Watts. 1hp = 746W.

A 16hp engine produces almost 12,000W of power.


 
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Old 01-04-2022, 02:12 PM   #7
Lighthouse 360   Lighthouse 360 is offline
 
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Some motors based on their dealer specs like the TT 250 from CSC motorcycles have a high compression gasket which bumps up the horsepower a little bit otherwise they’re just guessing on the numbers no one’s ever put these bikes on a dino.


 
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Old 01-04-2022, 03:05 PM   #8
Britt   Britt is offline
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Deckard_Cain View Post
11.5 can't be the power in Watts. 1hp = 746W.

A 16hp engine produces almost 12,000W of power.
Not just Watts, but kW.

11.5kW =~ 15.4hp
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Old 08-09-2024, 12:11 AM   #9
ProDigit   ProDigit is offline
 
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I'm wondering if a different size gear ratio affects the hp values.
Too small gear ratio, and top speed as well as HP to the wheels is lowered.
Larger front sprocket and/or smaller rear sprocket, will bring more engine HP to the wheels.
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Old 08-09-2024, 02:24 AM   #10
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ProDigit View Post
I'm wondering if a different size gear ratio affects the hp values.
Too small gear ratio, and top speed as well as HP to the wheels is lowered.
Larger front sprocket and/or smaller rear sprocket, will bring more engine HP to the wheels.
No.
No.
Also, No.

We can start this discussion again, but the moderators will just delete it all. I can do all he math, again, but I am sure it will get deleted, again. Which is why I am not a big fan of deleting things, but I'm no a moderator. So, instead of linking the last thread this whole discussion took place in I would have to start from scratch, and I just don't feel like it.

Sprocket changes don't affect horsepower to the rear wheel, just the torque multiplication and wheel speed relative to engine speed.
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Old 08-09-2024, 10:04 AM   #11
Sport Rider   Sport Rider is offline
 
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different sprockets change the RPM location at any given speed. That affects where you are in the HP and torque curves. it never changes what HP the motor is capable of producing.
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Old 08-09-2024, 03:43 PM   #12
ProDigit   ProDigit is offline
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Thumper View Post
Here we go again.
Thank you for clarifying again Dan...Changes in gearing modify torque, not hp.
Wrong. While engine hp output increases ever so slightly with a heavier load, HP output to the wheels definitely increases, especially if a too small gearing does not make use of the full engine potential.

For instance, stock gearing 65mph at 8.5k rpm will output a lower engine HP, than at 6-7k rpm through modified gears, if the HP curve clearly shows that that's engine peak HP.
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Old 08-09-2024, 03:46 PM   #13
ProDigit   ProDigit is offline
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Sport Rider View Post
different sprockets change the RPM location at any given speed. That affects where you are in the HP and torque curves. it never changes what HP the motor is capable of producing.

A- the HP values are mostly measured at the wheel, not the crank.

B- yes, engine HP values can differ between dynos, just based on the load the dyno puts on the engine.

At little to no load, HP values will be almost 0 HP. Consequently increase the load to max, the crank rotates slower, valves stay open longer, more air comes in and gets out, engine efficiency goes up, and engine output increases.

Saying HP doesn't go up under load is just as dumb as saying a 200cc air-cooled engine has the same HP as a water-cooled one.

The logic is very simple.
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Old 08-09-2024, 03:49 PM   #14
ProDigit   ProDigit is offline
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Megadan View Post
No.
No.
Also, No.

We can start this discussion again, but the moderators will just delete it all. I can do all he math, again, but I am sure it will get deleted, again. Which is why I am not a big fan of deleting things, but I'm no a moderator. So, instead of linking the last thread this whole discussion took place in I would have to start from scratch, and I just don't feel like it.

Sprocket changes don't affect horsepower to the rear wheel, just the torque multiplication and wheel speed relative to engine speed.
Sorry dude, but you're totally wrong about that.
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Old 08-09-2024, 05:38 PM   #15
Megadan   Megadan is offline
 
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You're wrong, we're all right. This is why.

hp =Fd/T

Math is right. K? Thanks, bye.

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