Let me add a few points; I do have little bit of experience. no special order.
Many of us use LiFePo akkus in their street bikes (as do I) with no problems at all, on the contrary.
You may or may not have problems with the rectifier (Regler) but those will be problems with that rectifier and not the fault of the battery. The rectifier in the Skorpion and SZR is notorious for crapping out and being generally undependable. Some people I know
never go any distance without a reserve unit in the tank bag. I replaced the rectifier in my persent Skorpion three times, the last time with one from Ignitech which is much better. I have supplied two different riders in the last 8 weeks with new rectifiers because their rectifiers had shot the battery dead. And I replaced the rectifier in my blue bike once as well.
When I was racing, I used my own CNC milled rearsets
here still with the lever bought from Metisse. You also see the PVL magneto I initially used, once I had gotten rid of the starter crap and the battery, too, since it is a magneto.
A bit later I got wise and reversed the shift pattern (I use first gear up only now), using a simple old MZ ET175 lever facing backwards:
This was the last version of the bike before I retired it.
You see that the mag is gone, replaced by a SilentHektik constant loss battery igniton. You can also just see the Mecdine speedshifter connected to the lever by that vertical Ti rod. Wheels are Marvic mags, slicks are Bridgestone, 120/70 and 165/55.
This bike weighed as you see it 125kg ready to race with 5ltr in the tank. The previous version without the lower fairing and without a battery was 122.
My present green road bike and my blue one I sold both weighed around 150kg in street registered form, the present green one weighs 148 with full tank.
back to the rearsets, once I jettisoned the Metisse parts (too expensive and difficult to get individually but when i first bought them, the company was just around the corner), I used MuZ Replica pegs and the brake lever from the SZR.
I used this setup on the street as well since we had milled several sets of brackets:
this one is welded. We used all the sets due to breakage in spills on the track. This last set is still in use on a friend's Skorpion.
In the meantime, I use Gilles AS31GT-MZ01 rearsets:
which are obviously adjustable and made for the Skorpion. A number of Skorpion riders have bought these. All the parts can be had separately (crashes), they are light and beautifully made. Having made two different models of rearsets myself, I would not have made them myself, had the Gilles been available. Mine were definitely not cheaper(selfemployed, my time costs money) and nowhere near as good.
my first set:
These later went to Chris Hunsicker in Phili. There were better as road pegs but also heavier than the second design.
I mentioned the weight.
150 kg is very conservative. It is rather easy to get a Skorpion down to 150kg in street going trim. there is no reason a racer should weigh that much. Throw out the starter and freewheel and the magnets inside the flywheel. You are running constant loss anyway. Get an Ignitech Sparker programmable ignition. When you put in another cam, throw out the decompression unit. By all means replace the gear for the balancer shaft on the crankshaft with a solid one or you will be looking for trouble in short order. Change the timing chain tensioner to manual.
exhausts.
Over here in Europe, the Holeshot is a no go. There are very few tracks where that kind of noise is allowed in training and only a few more for racing save professional stuff like MotoGP.
Been there, done it and I retired the bike two years ago. It has gotten worse. Mine was
LOUD! Ask Chris.
I am not sure how ESA manages in Holland. Here in Germany they run only at Oschersleben and that is one of the two tracks left where such DB levels are possible.
Sachsenring is 88db. You can't even ride a stock Ducati there and a Suzi without the airbox restrictor is too loud, too. Hockenheim is offically 98, Assen is I think 92.
Any of the straight thrus save a SR Racing has at least 106 out of the box, the Holeshot a lot more. I measured several. My bike had 128 but then the Bimota I ride is out of range = way over 130. Bimotas seem to be exempt from any restrictions...
As it is, the problem is less the can than the system. It is imperative to make (have made), or get second hand a system with large headers such as the Remus Cup system for the Skorpion. These had 32mm inside diameter instead of the original 28 = 32 outside. That is sufficient if you are not looking into all-out tuning and engine life measured in hours. A 2-2 system is potentially better because the combined volume of the two cans can be much larger than a single can could possibly be and each still be rather small.
The system I run on my SZR is very good and I am one of the quietest at meetings
but 1) the Termignoni system is no longer made and scarcer than hen's teeth and, 2) the SR Racing can is big and, 3) it wouldn't fit the Skorpion anyway. What I have on my Skorpion won't fit, either:
there is a similar system with large headers for the XT660:
http://www.off-the-road.de/XT-660/Exhausts/OTR-SR-2in1-system-e-marked.htmlbut like what I have, should be adaptable to the Skorpion without much trouble.
These guys also have a pair of larger headers for the XT660 engine which will fit the Skorpion as they are:
http://www.off-the-road.de/XT-660/Exhausts/OTR-Racing-Headpipe-XT-660-2004-2006.htmlThen two separate cans.