Öhlins’ 2WD project manager reveals: it was
faster dry or wet, suffered only a 2.5bhp power loss, and that there were four
manufacturers who had Öhlins 2WD-equipped mules.
This is an extended version of a story
which appeared in MCN in April.
A week before he retires, Lars Jansson - Öhlins’
R&D manager of future projects and the man behind the would-be revolutionary
2-wheel-drive system - is at last free to tell its secrets, and reveal it
remains in a high state of production-readiness.
How did the two-wheel-drive (2WD)
project begin? Yamaha had been interested in 2WD since the late
80s. In the early 90s they asked us to investigate the best method and we
suggested a small high-speed pump above the gear box and a small high-speed
hydraulic motor in the front hub with a reduction gear. Yamaha then asked us,
please build it. By the time we presented the first crude prototype in March
1993 we were quite enthusiastic.
How did development progress?
We devoted around a third of our future projects department to 2WD. The first
date we went public was on a motocross bike in the Swedish Gotland Grand
National in 1998. In 1999 we built two Yamaha TT600R bikes, but by this time
Yamaha seemed to be losing interest in using the system exclusively because they
felt the system was more of an add-on than part of a bike’s original build. So
we started to pursue opportunities to interest other manufacturers in it. This
is why we allowed the R1 to be ‘leaked’ in 2001. We told the rider to make
himself obvious while testing in Spain.
Is it true the system only works
when the rear wheel is slipping?
Yes. But the only time you have no rear-wheel slip on motorcycle is when you are
pushing the bike. If you are riding, even at a constant speed, then you have a
small slip. Before rubber transmits any drive at all it deforms. At 80km/h you
have maybe 0.5% slip. At full throttle at 200km/h you have as much as 5% slip. At
5% spin there is roughly 160bar pressure in the system [system is pre-pressurised
to 2-3 bar at rest].
In a corner, because of the different width in
tyres front and rear, the rear wheel rotates faster than the front and this
pressurises the system too, sending more power to the front. It works as hard at
a constant speed in a corner as when accelerating at full throttle in a straight
line. The effect is to drag the bag into the apex in a very different way to a
rear-wheel-drive [RWD] bike. Turning the throttle in a bend on a RWD bike causes
the bike’s front to lift and the bike to understeer. With 2wd the behaviour is
completely different – the more you accelerate the more tightly the bike begins
to turn.
What were the performance benefits?
Stability and cornering. Accelerating hard in a straight line the 2WD bike
tracked straighter, with less chance of wheelying. But if you did provoke it
into a wheelie it was much more easy to control – the spinning wheel creates
gyroscopic stability to balance the whole bike. In the corners testers found
they could accelerate harder round corners with none of the understeer that
would normally cause. Just overcoming the rolling resistance of the front wheel
helps the stability in all conditions. The R1 was 5 seconds faster in the wet at
Kelskoga track. But it was between 1 and 2 sec faster in the dry too. The press
has focused on advantages for novice riders, and this is true off-road. But
on-road the more experienced you are the more benefits you can exploit. The more
aggressively you ride it, the closer you dare to be to the limit, the more you
stand to gain.
Which other manufacturers were
interested?
Four manufacturers from Japan and Europe were very interested. We visited their
factories to demonstrate the 2wd R1 and TT600R, and we came away with some of
their machines to convert to 2wd for them to evaluate – everything from
sportsbikes to tourers.
What was the response from the
manufacturers?
Most of their test riders were impressed by the system on the R1. Most were
going faster in the dry as well as the wet thanks to increased corner speed. But
it altered the bike’s character from very crisp and urgent, into something more
relaxed. Not slower, but easier to drive through corners and less ‘frisky’. It
was a little heavier to turn in chicanes.
By 2004 we had the manufacturers’ bikes ready for evaluation – a tourer, a
sportsbike equivalent to the R1, an adventure bike and another off-road bike. We
thought the system added performance to all of them. They then took them away
and as far as I know they still have them. Waiting to hear back was like waiting
to hear from a girlfriend who has gone away. Unfortunately we heard very little.
What went wrong?
In 2004 we produced with Yamaha the WR450 2-Trac, with a run of 250 units. But
demand was low because the price of such a limited run is high, and it was never
homologated for the road. It was very frustrating to watch that bike fail. We
continued to develop the technology for two years, until 2007, and had a new
generation ready. But after the 2-Trac there wasn’t the demand. If that bike had
succeeded we would have two-wheel-drive Yamahas and perhaps from other
manufacturers today.
Could it be revived?
Yes, up until 2007 we had developed four ‘next generation’ systems, one for each
type of bike, and with different ways for adjusting the power delivery to the
front wheel. We have stopped development work, but we have never said this
project is closed. If a customer comes to us to discuss two-wheel drive we could
resume work very quickly.
How accurate was press coverage of
the technology?
We never tested at the Nurburgring. We tested at some tracks in Italy in
association with a manufacturer and we tested in Spain and extensively at
Karlskoga, a bumpy Swedish track.
The quoted weight of 8kg additional weight was about right. Power up to 15%
could be transferred to the front wheel, that was right too. But people were
wrong about the power losses – it was only about 2.5bhp at 150km/h.
Where is the R1 now?
We made two R1s – one of which is still in our workshop and one Yamaha has.
Why haven’t we got 2WD in MotoGP,
where traction is at a premium? I have no answer. I think it would be beneficial.
Will Öhlins produce kits?
Technically it’s possible to make the system work as a kit for after-market
application and we have looked at this, but it is not economic. And as bikes
continued to develop the space available for the pump became less and less.
Do you have any regrets over the
years you spent on 2WD?
Not at all. It’s been very rewarding technically, we’ve met a lot of people in
other manufacturers because of it and we have a product that is production
worthy. And we are a little bit proud of it also. It is not the product that has
fallen asleep, but the market.
NOTE: Some of the photos on
Motorcycle Specs are owned by somebody. If you see any of your
photos, you can let me know so that I can acknowledge it, or if
you object to it, I can remove it altogether. If any copyright
holder objects to their articles being placed on Motorcycle
Specs, it will be removed upon request. Any correction or more
info on these bikes will kindly beappreciated
Contact MePrivacy
Policy
Website Stats