Not a Skorpion but the same 3YF engine, I have rebuilt another customer's engine for his Yamaha SZR.
My "normal treatment":
-Ports modified and enlarged;
-Megacycle 280-2 cam without deco
and with stock valves and springs;
-cylinder bored and honed to 101mm for a WISECO flat top forged piston, not the hi-comp. Raptor piston, this is for the Grizzly and is 1mm higher, necessitating a thicker base gasket which I routinely make from 1,5mm aluminum sheet. I run this same piston and prefer to use it in customer engines unless they really desparately want the 12:1 thing. I am not a fan of such high compression for a street engine;
-lightened flywheel/freewheel assembly;
-Mikuni TM34-B65 in modified stock airbox with K&N;
BTW, compare the size of this stock airbox with the ridiculous thing on the MZ.
-solid balancer gear;
-modified cooling system using FZR600 thermostat housing and filler cap to get a real thermostat-controlled system, something neither the Yamaha nor the MZ have originally;
THe FZR thermostat has three connections, two in the bell below the true thermostat so the coolant from the head goes straight back to the waterpump thru that green garden hose and T-connector until the thermostat opens, letting the water flow thru the radiator which is obviously missing in this pic.
-and of course an Ignitech Sparker programmed to a max of 29º BTDC at 6000 dropping to 27º by 9000
compare:
That nearly vertical advance around 3000 is the reason for the chainlash.
-a new exhaust system utilizing TDM headers I had which I rebent (cold) to suit and cut off to length:
From stainless tubing I had that by lucky chance fit exactly over the TDM pipes I made a Y-piece
and then mated this up to a bought 15ª bend with a 50mm ID slipon end
The Rombo end can es
LOUD! but it is the owner's It was already in place with the OEM system botched up to fit. I cut the botching off leaving the connector pipe (for a R6) and can untouched.
The new system widens progressively, starting with the 35mm OD TDM headers (OEM=31.5), the the Y-piece =36.5mm OD siamesed to a 50mm area matching up to the 50mm OD connector pipe.
Weather has not allowed much test riding. I did take it out yesterday for the second time to do some errands to a neighboring town. It starts immediately:
one twist of the grip, no choke, left thumb on button, right hand gas to catch it right off and bums! Since it has no choke, you have to play with the gas at first to keep it alive. Once a bit warmed up, gas response is VERY fast, the engine remarkably flexible, pulling from just shy of 3000 without chainlash. This both due to the very reduced advance but also to the relatively low compression of about 10:1. I set the warm idle to 1800 and it is very smooth.
Fun to ride, it really gets up and goes. Of course I can't really push it yet; new piston and rings.
Once in the other town, it just had to start raining! Riding home, I took it easy, not being familiar with his Pirelli Diabolo tires in the wet. Riding away from a stop sign down a favorite bypass (straight), I didn't push 1st at all but once in 2nd and higher up, pushed to to 7000 is less than no time and this time shifted race-style into third and WOW - CAREFUL: rear wheel spin in 3rd gear with the tach jumping right up almost where it had been and the bike fishtailing a very little (so the tires are alright).
Guess there is enuf performance now to pester the big game on those twisty roads "real gud!"