A big bang engine has an unconventional firing order designed so that some of the power strokes occur simultaneously or in close succession. This is achieved by changing the ignition timing, changing or re-timing the camshaft, and sometimes in combination with a change in crankpin angle. The goal is to change the power delivery characteristics of the engine. A regular-firing multi-cylinder engine fires at approximately even intervals, giving a smooth-running engine. Because a big-bang engine has uneven power delivery, it tends to run rougher and generates more vibration than an even-firing engine.

An early big bang application and possibly the source of its discovery is reputed to be American west coast desert racing off-road and also flat track racing motorcycles in the 1960s, where it was thought that large-capacity single-cylinder engine bikes had better traction compared to twin-cylinder engined bikes with similar power, hence 360-degree crankshaft twins were reconfigured to fire both cylinders at the same time, giving the same power impulse interval as a single.

Twin-cylinder engines

edit
Engine Crankshaft Ignition timing Graphical Example
Single (2-stroke)
Parallel twin
Flat twin
-
360°
180°
360-360 1-0-0-0-1-0-0-0-
BSA, Triumph, Norton, AJS, Matchless, Kawasaki W800, Kawasaki W650 and BMW F800S
BMW R series, Honda CB450s
Single
Parallel twingle
Flat twingle
-
360°
180°
720 1-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-
2-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-
2-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-
Inline twin 180° 180-540 1-0-1-0-0-0-0-0- 1966 Honda “Black Bomber”, Yamaha TX500, Honda CB500 Twin and Kawasaki ER-6
Inline twin
90° V twin
270°
360°
270-450 1-0-0-1-0-0-0-0- Yamaha TRX850, Triumph's Scrambler, 2009-on Thunderbird and 2016-on Bonneville family
Yamaha MT-07, 2015-on Honda Africa Twin, Aprilia RS660
Ducati, Moto Guzzi, Suzuki SV650, Honda VTR1000, Mazda R360
Inline twin
75° V-Twin
285°
360°
285-435 1-0-0-1-0-0-0-0- KTM 790 Duke
KTM 1290 Super Duke R
60° V-Twin 360° 300-420 1-0-0-1-0-0-0-0- Aprilia
Inline Twin
45° V twin
315°
360°
315-405 1-0-0-0-1-0-0-0- Husqvarna Nuda 900R
Harley-Davidson
45° V twingle 360° 45-675 1-1-0-0-0-0-0-0- Modified Harley-Davidson XR-750 for flat track racing

Parallel twins

edit

In a parallel twin, both pistons reach top dead center at the same time. In a parallel twin where the pistons move up and down at the same time, the crankshaft angle is 360 degrees.


The classic British parallel-twins (BSA, Triumph, Norton, AJS & Matchless) all had 360° crankshafts that, compared to a single, gave twice as many power/torque impulses for a given amount of crankshaft rotation, these impulses are equally spaced to give an equal firing interval: once every 360 degrees of crankshaft rotation. However, the 360 twin had a mechanical primary engine balance that was no better than a single.

Inline twins, Japanese inline twins of the 1960s (such as the 1966 Honda “Black Bomber” and the Yamaha TX500) adopted a 180° crank that afforded perfect mechanical primary engine balance, but gave an unequal firing interval; 180 degrees, 540 degrees, 180 degrees, 540 degrees etc - due to one of the two pistons needing to be at top dead centre at the beginning of the power stroke.

The Yamaha TRX850 pioneered the use of a 270° crank. This configuration allowed a firing pattern more regular than a 180° crank, and less regular than a 360° crank. A 270° crank gives the best possible secondary engine balance for a parallel twin, and its exhaust note and power delivery resembles those of a 90° V-twin.

Twingles

edit

A "twingle" is a four-stroke twin-cylinder engine with an altered firing order designed to give power pulses similar to a single-cylinder four-stroke engine.

Inline twins with a 360° crankpin offset or flat-twins can be easily converted into twingles by firing both of the cylinders at the same time and installing a camshaft or camshafts that operate both cylinders' valves in parallel. Because many such engines already employ the wasted spark principle, only the camshaft modification is necessary. The Vintage Dirt Track Racing Association (VDTRA) 2010 Rules have banned vintage motorcycles from being set up as a twingle.[citation needed]

V twins

edit

A narrow angle V-twin such as the 45° Harley-Davidson naturally has slightly unevenly spaced power strokes. By changing the ignition timing on one of the cylinders by 360° the power strokes are very closely spaced. This will cause uneven fuel distribution in an engine with a single carburettor. The Harley-Davidson XR-750 with twin carburettors was a popular bike to twingle. It had great success in flattrack racing.[citation needed]

Three-cylinder engines

edit

A straight-three engine is most often equipped with a 120° crankshaft that fires evenly every 240°. The Laverda Jota 180, produced between 1973 and 1981, was the first motorcycle to use a different kind of crankshaft. In the Jota, a "flat-plane" crankshaft was used which has cylinders 1 and 3 offset by 360° while the second one is offset by 180° from the outer cylinders.

Triumph Motorcycles Ltd is another company that used a different firing order on an inline-three and introduced a "T-plane" crankshaft on the 2020 Tiger 900. In this case, cylinders 1 and 2 are offset by 90° and cylinders 2 and 3 are offset by at 90°, resulting in the crank pin arrangement resembling the letter T. Triumph claims improved low-end character, off-road feel, and a unique sound.

Engine Crankshaft Ignition timing Graphical Example
I3 120° 240-240-240 1-0-0-1-0-0-1-0-0- Yamaha MT-09,

Triumph Street Triple & Speed Triple, Triumph Rocket III, MV Agusta Brutale series 675 & 800

I3 'T-plane' 270° 180-270-270 1-0-1-0-0-1-0-0- Triumph Tiger 900 (2020)
I3 'Flat-plane' 180° 180-180-360 1-0-1-0-1-0-0-0- 1973-1982 Laverda Jota
112° V3 8° / 120° 120-120-120 1-1-1-1-1-1- 1983 Honda NS500[1]
90° V3 0-90-270 2-1-0-0-2-1-0-0- 1983 Honda MVX250F, 1985 Honda NS400R

Four-cylinder engines

edit
Engine Crankshaft Ignition timing Graphical Examples[citation needed]
I4 180° 180-180-180-180 1-0-1-0-1-0-1-0- Honda CB750
I4 "Long bang" 180° 0-180-0-540 2-0-2-0-0-0-0-0- Shinya Nakano's Kawasaki Ninja ZX-RR[2]
60° V4 180° with 60° split pins 180-180-180-180 1-0-1-0-1-0-1-0- Ford Taunus and Essex V4 engines
65° V4
70° V4
90° V4
I4 "Crossplane"
180°
180°
180°
90°
180-115-180-245
180-110-180-250
180-90-180-270
1-0-1-1-0-1-0-0- Aprilia RSV4
1985–2007 Yamaha V-Max
1986– Honda VFR 750/800
2009- Yamaha YZF-R1 & 2004- Yamaha YZR-M1
90° V4 0°/360° with 90° split pins
180° with 90° split pins
180-180-180-180 1-0-1-0-1-0-1-0- Porsche 919 Hybrid Gen 1 early development engine
Porsche 919 Hybrid Gen 2 engine, ZAZ Zaporozhets, 1956+ Wisconsin Motor Manufacturing Company V4 engine
90° V4 180° 180-270-180-90 1-0-1-0-0-1-0-1- 1998– Honda VFR800 FI[3]
90° V4 "Twin pulse"
70°
75°
90-200-90-340
345-90-195-90
1-1-0-1-1-0-0-0- Ducati Desmosedici RR,[4] Ducati Panigale V4
Motus MV4/MV4R[5]
90° V4 "Droner" 360° 90-270-90-270 1-1-0-0-1-1-0-0- Honda RVF400/VF/RC30/RC45, 2012–2016 Honda RC213V
90° V4 "Big bang" 180° 90-90-90-450 1-1-1-1-0-0-0-0- 2017– Honda RC213V,[6] Langdon Honda VFR750F RC36[7]
112° V4 "Big bang" (two-stroke) 0° with 180° bank split 0-68-0-292-0-68-0-292 2-2-0-0-2-2-0-0- 1990 Honda NSR500[8]
90° V4 "Screamer" (two-stroke) 180° with no bank split 90-90-90-90-90-90-90-90 1-1-1-1-1-1-1-1- 1984 Honda NSR500[9]

Note that typical two-stroke V4s have four crank throws or pins (see below) so it is important to stipulate all four crank pin phases with the two-stroke engines. The "split" in this case is referring to the difference in phase between piston pairs in "opposite" banks that would normally share a crank pin in a four-stroke engine.

The Ford V4s use split-pin crankshafts, like many 60° V6s. Just as with a boxer-four, piston pairs from opposite banks reach top-dead-centre at the same time, but with a crankpin split of only 60° instead of 180°, potentially giving a shorter and stronger or stiffer crankshaft. For 60° V6s, the crankpins are usually split the other way causing the paired pistons to reach top-dead-centre 120° apart.

Inline fours

edit

As with many even-firing engines with four or more cylinders, an even-firing four-cylinder engine is sometimes referred to as a "Screamer". A "long bang" inline 4 engine fires both pairs of cylinders in quick succession or simultaneously; the power delivery is identical to a parallel twin with a 180° crank and similar to a V-twin. In 2005 Kawasaki experimented with this configuration on the ZX-RR MotoGP bike.[2]

2-stroke V4

edit

Typical two-stroke V4s have four crank throws, or crank pins, instead of the two that most four-stroke V4s have (two connecting rods sharing each pin). This is primarily because each piston needed its own sealed crankcase volume for the purposes of efficient induction, where in some cases separate crankshafts served each bank in order to achieve this.

The Honda NSR500 began and ended its life as a "screamer", where the pistons were phased similarly to a four-stroke V-four with a 180° crank. However, in 1990 Honda set the crankpin phases of each pair of pistons within each bank to be the same (like a four-stroke "droner": 360° crank), but with each bank's crankpins offset by 180° to each other (effectively "splitting" the pins and changing the V-angle, in terms of ignition timing). This was called a "big bang" engine.

Yamaha created a big bang YZR500 in 1992. The YZR500 had two crankshafts like a U engine and the angle between each pair of cylinders was 90°, like a V4.

In 1997 Mick Doohan wanted to run a 180° screamer engine. HRC crew chief Jerry Burgess explained "The 180 got back a direct relationship between the throttle and the rear wheel, When the tire spun I could roll off without losing drive. The big bang has a lot of engine braking, so it upsets the bike into corners, then when you open the throttle you get this sudden pulse of power, which again upsets the suspension. Mick's secret is corner speed, so he needs the bike to be smooth and the 180 is much smoother."[8]

Five-cylinder engines

edit
Engine Crankshaft Ignition timing Graphical Example
I5 even-firing 144° 144-144-144-144-144 1-1-1-1-1- Various
I5 uneven 120° 120-120-120-120-240 1-1-1-1-1-0- Honda RC148 & RC149 - straight-six with one cylinder removed[10]
75.5° V5 360° / 104.5°[11] 75.5-104.5-180-75.5-284.5
0-284.5-180-0-255.5
1-1-0-1-0-0-1-1-0-0-
2-0-0-0-1-0-0-2-0-0-
Honda RC211V - 2001, 3 exhausts, sequential ignitions
Honda RC211V - 2004, 4 exhausts, simultaneous ignitions
60° V5 144° / 12° split pins 144-144-144-144-144 1-1-1-1-1- Oldsmobile Diesel V5 prototype

Six-cylinder engines

edit
Engine Crankshaft Ignition timing Graphical Example
Even-fire I6 120° 120-120-120-120-120-120 1-1-1-1-1-1- Various
120° V6 even-fire
90° even-fire V6
60° even-fire V6
Boxer 6
120° common pin
120° with −30° split pins
120° with −60° split pins
120° with 180° split pins
120-120-120-120-120-120 1-1-1-1-1-1- Ferrari 156, Ferrari 296 GTB, McLaren Artura
VW / Audi, Mercedes, Chevrolet, Ford etc.
Alfa Romeo Busso, Nissan; PSA ES/L engine
Porsche, Subaru, Chevrolet Corvair
90° odd-fire V6 120° common pin 90-150-90-150-90-150 1-1-0-1-1-0-1-1-0- Buick V6 and Renault PRV engine (early versions of both); Alfa Romeo Giulia Quadrifoglio; 2014+ Formula 1

References

edit
  1. ^ "NS500" (in Japanese). Retrieved 6 April 2021.
  2. ^ a b Kawasaki continues big bang testing, MotoGP.com, 20 March 2005, retrieved 2010-04-20
  3. ^ "Honda VFR800 FI 98-01 Service Manual Free Download | - Part 2". Retrieved 2022-07-10.
  4. ^ 2008 Ducati Desmosedici MotoGP Replica, Fast Dates, 2008, retrieved 2010-04-20
  5. ^ "Home". americanv4.com.
  6. ^ "Evolution of the Repsol Honda engine: The RC212V and the RC213V". 24 March 2021.
  7. ^ How To Make A Big Bang Engine With A VFR750, retrieved 2022-09-02
  8. ^ a b Honda NSR500 GP Racing History, Ultimate MotorCycling, 2010, archived from the original on 10 May 2010, retrieved 2010-04-20
  9. ^ NSR500, Superbike Planet, archived from the original on 2010-02-06, retrieved 2010-04-20
  10. ^ "RC 148 / RC149" (in Japanese). Retrieved 3 March 2021.
  11. ^ "RC211V" (in Japanese). Retrieved 3 March 2021.