By now, big motorcycle manufacturers are looking at alternative engine types like hybrid or electric. But there’s also another side of using new technologies, that is boosting performance of the engine using a turbo or a supercharger, like the one Kawasaki installs in the mighty powerful Ninja H2 hyperbike.
Some smaller companies also offer you the possibility to bolt-on a turbo kit on your bike.
But adding a turbo or a supercharger, besides all the advantages in performance, also has its downsides: it generates more heat, and the system itself usually means that the bike will be much more expensive than a naturally aspirated bike.
Now, Alter Ego Hardware found a similar solution to a turbo but at a much lower price range: The Impulse Drum Charger.
And what is the Impulse Drum Charger?
Similarly in looks to a conventional turbo, the IDC collects exhaust gases to create more pressure on the air-intake, but it doesn’t require any turbines or compressors, or any electronic system for that matter. It’s basically a drum with a carbon membrane in a cylinder shape connected to the exhaust in one side, where it receives the exhaust gases, and on the other side it’s connected to the engine’s air-intake system.
The exhaust gas enters and accumulates inside the drum every time the cylinder fires, building pressure thanks to the membrane and a valve, and when the pressure exceeds the membrane’s threshold, the first valve closes and the reed valve lets the pressurized air into the air-intake system.
This results in a pressure of 0.3bar being pumped out from single membrane drum charger, or 0.6bar for the dual-membrane charger.
According to Alter Ego Hardware, the system allows to increase engine performance in 15-20% in power and torque, the heat never goes beyond 50 degrees Celsius, all this coming from a piece of plastic, a carbon membrane and some valves that make for a total weight of around 1,5kg.
The downside to the Impulse Drum Charger is that it has to be fixed at a distance of 60 to 80 cm from the exhaust header, and it needs to be attached to the bike, which might be a problem because the drum needs to be around 220 mm diameter when each cylinder is less than 250 cc, and larger cylinders up to 400 cc require a 270 mm diameter membrane to get enough pressure generated.
And this is for each cylinder!
For example, if your bike has a two-cylinder engine, you’ll need two drums, three cylinders will require three drums, and so on.
Based in Rome, Italy, Alter Ego Hardware believes that their system is a good and valid option over the expensive aftermarket turbo kits we see on customized bikes, or even bikes coming from big manufacturers. Even though the Impulse Drum Charger doesn’t have a fixed price yet, the company says it’ll cost ten times less than a conventional turbo kit.
Here at iMotorbike we’re looking forward to see if this simple idea has some real-world results. Obviously, a liter sport bike won’t be able to use the Impulse Drum Charger, but we can see It being used in small or medium capacity bikes where the rider will benefit a lot from this improved performance.
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