Torque reaction is common in any reciprocating system. Generally speaking,
you get torque reaction when the rotating mass is changing velocity
(applying throttle would be an example). I am more familiar with high
performance cars and motorcycles, but the energy (torque) has to have
something to react against, usually a fixed, stationary object (like the
ground). If one were to apply throttle aggressively, but gradually, torque
can be managed. If the system is at max RPM and has stabilized, torque
reaction should be controllable) P-factor anyone? [Yeah I know, gyroscopic
issues apply here too... aren't airplanes fun?]

JMHO

Mark W
N952MW

-----Original Message-----
From: krnet-boun...@mylist.net [mailto:krnet-boun...@mylist.net] On Behalf
Of Teate, Stephen
Sent: Thursday, July 09, 2009 10:37 AM
To: KRnet
Subject: RE: KR> Suburu engines - something to consider



"This is an obvious attempt at humor or Mike is smoking something.  An
R-985
on a KR 2?  Yea, right."

I didn't even think about the humor angle Larry and I hope you are
right. I will never believe that my Sube will ever cause a torque issue
as the
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