I had an Aprilia 500 in the past and it would hold one RPM while accelerating (around 7000)
until you came off the variator. The Yager doesn't seem to do that and I agree it seems to
be at different RPM's at the same speed so is hard to understand what's going on. I know
that if you accelerate to a speed the RPM's will be higher than if you go past that speed and
"back down" into it.
I tried heavier and lighter rollers just to see. I liked the heavier ones, they calmed the RPM's
down a bit (I could cruise at 5000 RPM's) and when you hit the throttle it would jump to
6500 and motor off but I lost power to climb hills. Stock I could accelerate to 50 MPH up a
local hill and heavier I could only get to 40.
The lighter ones were just like stock only a tiny bit different in RPM's (200) but the clutch
seemed to engage at a higher RPM and it accelerated at 7200 RPM. I don't know, I've been
trying to get the clutch to engage like it did when stock.
Those anti rattle dots seem to keep the clutch engage/disengage point very sharp. I tried
relieving the slots a bit as they were tight in there but now it slips before engaging and doesn't
want to disengage at the same point it engaged. It's still tight just not quite as it was. Here's a picture;
That clutch works great but the price is a bit out of my reach!
We need to find a gear ratio that works in the Yager. the only gears I have seen are for GY6
or Vespa's. The Vespa's are totally different even some GY6's are different as some mount the
trans stuff on the inside and some on the outside. I don't think they will have a ratio that works
for Yager. Craig Vetter had to have a gear set made for his. I feel the Yager is more powerful
than it's 150cc cousins but they limited it so a new gear would help.
Actually that's good to know that the CEL light will come on at redline. The bike seems to go
past the line on the Tach so I wondered where it really is.
On the RPM's to tune for, it's what you like. 6500 is max torque and will give you great fuel
economy but acceleration will be slower. 8000 will give you the best acceleration but poor
fuel mileage. 7000 - 7500 is a good trade off for all around performance. Here's some data
from a guy with a Ruckus, he shows RPM's speeds and mileage, you decide...;
http://fc.greensboroday.org/~epaynter/brcvt