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Thread: Will a Wiseco Piston give you more power over stock

  1. #1
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    Will a Wiseco Piston give you more power over stock

    Will a Wiseco piston give me any power of the stocker? Assuming both are the same bore and compression?

    Thanks,

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    1986 ATC 250r, 1986 Tri Z, 1990 LT 500R "Quadzilla"


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  2. #2
    HRC1 is offline At The Back Of The Pack Arm chair racerFirst time rider
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    No. It might be a little lighter than the stock piston, but without changing comp, You won't notice a thing. Unless your stock piston has a hole in it.

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    Got it...thanks!

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    1986 ATC 250r, 1986 Tri Z, 1990 LT 500R "Quadzilla"


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    1994 KTM 550 MXC (yes its a two stroke...66 hp stock!)
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  4. #4
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    unless you have an R and you can use their racers choice piston or one of their uncut piston skirt pistons you have to custom cut the skirt on.....
    1985 Honda ATC250R drag trike with s/t kit and full drag CR hybrid motor and drag chassis...
    1986 Honda ATC250R daily rider fully modded engine, +4 swinger,etc...
    1997 Polaris Storm 800 triple, boyesen reeds, dg individual silencers, 240 studs, 123mph on radar...

  5. #5
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    Quote Originally Posted by HRC1
    No. It might be a little lighter than the stock piston, but without changing comp, You won't notice a thing. Unless your stock piston has a hole in it.
    I would have to disagree ... almost all aftermarket Wiseco 2-stroke ATV pistons are made with revised and more agressive piston porting which will give you a couple of ponies, depending on the application. If you don't believe me, hold one up to a stock piston and you be the judge. They also usually have a more radiused crown than stock, which in turn will raise the compression ratio slightly - but - not usually enough to write home about. Even though i have gotten into countless arguments on here about it - I will admit that there really is no such thing as a hi-compression 2-stroke Wiseco piston.
    Last edited by Wickedfinger; 03-07-2005 at 01:08 AM.
    J. Jonny D, --- Quad - Trike relations committee Chairman and all around swell guy.

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  6. #6
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    Ok...now I am thinking of putting one in my Z although it does not seem to need it.

    Question: Is it worth it?

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    1986 ATC 250r, 1986 Tri Z, 1990 LT 500R "Quadzilla"


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    1994 KTM 550 MXC (yes its a two stroke...66 hp stock!)
    1988 Yamaha DT

  7. #7
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    well, you almost never hear of anybody "grenading" or loosing a skirt on a Wisco piston, unless something else was to blame (like non-relieved ports on a re-bore, too lean, etc.). They are of a higher quality, with a much higher "silicone" content than most (I stress most) of your OEM pistons. Polaris's pinger pistons are a good example of this, they are known for having breakage and skirt problems if the motors are modded even a little, and they are made by ART/Sudco, just like all of the other manufacturers.
    J. Jonny D, --- Quad - Trike relations committee Chairman and all around swell guy.

    Rides: '91 Warrior, '87 TW200, 1984 YTM225DX, 1984 ATC125M, '71 CL350 Scrambler

  8. #8
    Quickonstep is offline At The Back Of The Pack Arm chair racerAt the back of the pack
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    Quote Originally Posted by Wickedfinger
    well, you almost never hear of anybody "grenading" or loosing a skirt on a Wisco piston, unless something else was to blame (like non-relieved ports on a re-bore, too lean, etc.). They are of a higher quality, with a much higher "silicone" content than most (I stress most) of your OEM pistons. Polaris's pinger pistons are a good example of this, they are known for having breakage and skirt problems if the motors are modded even a little, and they are made by ART/Sudco, just like all of the other manufacturers.

    heh.. are you kidding me? why do you think wiseco has earned the name "wiseco DISPOSABLE pistons" i have seen more grenaded wiseco's than any other piston out there.. and that is INCLUDING stock.. i have an entire container of grenaded pistons from customers boats that i would be more than happy to back my claim up.. most pistons come from fuel injected, mercury 2.5 liter 260+ hp motors.. and most of these motors are STOCK engines, just needing a piston replacement or a rebore.. i also might add that while the stock pistons lasted 150-200 hours, the wiseco's lasted MAYBE 50 hours.. and about 40% of those lasted less than 10..

    My suggestion for a piston is a JE piston.. after seeing the quailty of a JE over a wiseco, i will NEVER buy another wiseco ever again.. Also the wiseco's c/r are 99% off, and are not correct, hence a 11.1 compression ratio piston will yeild apx 10.5:1, which in my book just isnt right.. while the JE pistons factor in the STOCK gasket thickness to get a true compression ratio..

    The choice is yours, but i would STRONGLY suggestion taking a look at JE pistons and some other manufactures out there..

    After opening the box to your first JE piston, you will understand where i am coming from when i say this.. if i had a new one i would post apic of that and a wiseco and you could be the judge.

    www.jepistons.com

    Just my opinion and advice

    Jesse

  9. #9
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    Quote Originally Posted by Quickonstep
    heh.. are you kidding me? why do you think wiseco has earned the name "wiseco DISPOSABLE pistons" i have seen more grenaded wiseco's than any other piston out there.. and that is INCLUDING stock.. i have an entire container of grenaded pistons from customers boats that i would be more than happy to back my claim up.. most pistons come from fuel injected, mercury 2.5 liter 260+ hp motors.. and most of these motors are STOCK engines, just needing a piston replacement or a rebore.. i also might add that while the stock pistons lasted 150-200 hours, the wiseco's lasted MAYBE 50 hours.. and about 40% of those lasted less than 10..

    My suggestion for a piston is a JE piston.. after seeing the quailty of a JE over a wiseco, i will NEVER buy another wiseco ever again.. Also the wiseco's c/r are 99% off, and are not correct, hence a 11.1 compression ratio piston will yeild apx 10.5:1, which in my book just isnt right.. while the JE pistons factor in the STOCK gasket thickness to get a true compression ratio..

    The choice is yours, but i would STRONGLY suggestion taking a look at JE pistons and some other manufactures out there..

    After opening the box to your first JE piston, you will understand where i am coming from when i say this.. if i had a new one i would post apic of that and a wiseco and you could be the judge.

    www.jepistons.com

    Just my opinion and advice

    Jesse
    Good debate Jesse
    There are thousands of machines out there and you based this basicaly on one motor? JE has it's problems too. Currently there are a lot of them cracking up in the raptors.
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  10. #10
    HRC1 is offline At The Back Of The Pack Arm chair racerFirst time rider
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    Quote Originally Posted by Wickedfinger
    I would have to disagree ... almost all aftermarket Wiseco 2-stroke ATV pistons are made with revised and more agressive piston porting which will give you a couple of ponies, depending on the application. If you don't believe me, hold one up to a stock piston and you be the judge. They also usually have a more radiused crown than stock, which in turn will raise the compression ratio slightly - but - not usually enough to write home about. Even though i have gotten into countless arguments on here about it - I will admit that there really is no such thing as a hi-compression 2-stroke Wiseco piston.
    Ok, here it goes, my 1985 atc250r was about as nice as i could have asked for when i got it 4 yrs ago, Stock piston, clutch cover had never been off, bone stock internally, i ran it for 2 yrs and decided since i didnt know what amount of time it had on it before i got it, that i wanted to freshen it up before it blew. Well, there was only 5 thou clearance in the cyl if i remem right. I could see all the crosshatch still, and the piston was fine, but since i had it apart i decided to punch it .10 and get the wiseco, even though many friends of mine had skirts crack & fall off, and ring retaining pins back out scoring the hell out of the bore. I choze wiseco over pro x cause they were lighter, and forged. I havent had any problems with mine in 2 yrs, But, i did not notice a performance gain over stock. It felt a little bit snappier, but after replacing a STOCK cast, heavy and worn piston, i think anyone will feel something different. I don't think the differences you mentioned matter as mutch in the real world as they do on paper or in your hand. And my "gain" was nill if any. Unless you change something drastically, most pistons "feel" the same.

  11. #11
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    great info...thanks!!

    SEND ME PM HERE - CLICK HERE

    1986 ATC 250r, 1986 Tri Z, 1990 LT 500R "Quadzilla"


    Dirtbikes:

    1994 KTM 550 MXC (yes its a two stroke...66 hp stock!)
    1988 Yamaha DT

  12. #12
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    i dont think JE makes 2 stroke pistons...at least none of their catalogs have them...
    1985 Honda ATC250R drag trike with s/t kit and full drag CR hybrid motor and drag chassis...
    1986 Honda ATC250R daily rider fully modded engine, +4 swinger,etc...
    1997 Polaris Storm 800 triple, boyesen reeds, dg individual silencers, 240 studs, 123mph on radar...

  13. #13
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    Never had a problem with any of my Wisecos. A single cylinder trike motor is a far cry from a 260hp boat motor though. I wouldn't worry about it. I think you'd have to beating on it pretty hard for any piston to break (assuming the bore was done right) and we all know your trikes don't get beat.

  14. #14
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    8 years on my 10.25:1 Wiseco 350X slug, and nary a hiccup........
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  15. #15
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    Considering they are more common in ATVs and Motorcycles than any other piston, (probably even OEM pistons), the fact that one guy says they are a problem in a boat motor isnt enough to make me run out and buy some exotic brand you rarely hear of being used. Also Ill add that almost every piston I have ever seen come apart, it was caused by a worn out bore, or a cheapo budget bore job, or improper setup. I havent yet seen one that could be attributed to a "faulty piston", OEM or Wiseco. Some might withstand faulty conditions better than others, but you dont correct faulty conditions, by buying a piston that will handle it better.

    As for the original question, "do they produce more power" - probably, from an engineer's standpoint, but if you go out and buy a Wiseco piston kit to replace a good OEM one, for no other reason than an expectation of a performance gain, you are going to be very disappointed with what you got for the money spent.

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