Interesting! Small world, huh?
Yes, Steve's a good guy. He has a lot of videos on YouTube.
He started out as a C10 owner, came up with lots of mods for his own bike, word spread, and he became "The C10 Guru" guy.
Then he got a C14, saw a few of it's difficiencies, and came up with his own flash for his bike. When he compared it side by side w/ a friend's heavily modded C14 that had dyno'd 162 RWHP doing rollons, Steve's stock bike w/ just his flash literally would walk away every time! To make sure it wasn't the rider, he then traded bikes w/ his friend. Steve's bike still walked away, so it wasn't the rider making the difference. His friend had a full Area P exhaust, pulled secondary flies, PCV w/ autotune... it would start to come on strong and gain back after reaching 8000 rpm...
Word spread, and after lots of dyno testing (using the same dyno Ricky Gadson's mechanic uses for his bike), he started doing them for us guys on COG. The EVO flash (his latest version and the one I have) is like his 6th version.
He posted his stock bike's dyno chart in the beginning. Kawasaki's fueling maps had several places in various rpm's that reflected dips in the powerband. From 2-3000 rpm, it was very rich, and slow to climb. Then it would rocket upward, to another dip around 5000, then around 5700 it would go ballistic to 8000, where it would dip again, until the 9700 rpm redline.
The EVO chart shows linear, straight line power, from 2000 rpm to 9700.
No dips. In the realworld, using the old "butt dyno", I can sure tell the chart's not lying. The biggest improvement comes in the low rpm smoothness.
The C14 in stock form has a very "notchy" throttle. It's a dual cable system, but it can be very jerky at low speeds. It really annoyed me a few years back when I went to XSSE and rode Deal's Gap and the Dragon. Since Steve's flash... that problem's gone, and it's smooth as silk.
Yes, when it comes to C10's and now C14's...Steve's the man.
Yes, Steve's a good guy. He has a lot of videos on YouTube.
He started out as a C10 owner, came up with lots of mods for his own bike, word spread, and he became "The C10 Guru" guy.
Then he got a C14, saw a few of it's difficiencies, and came up with his own flash for his bike. When he compared it side by side w/ a friend's heavily modded C14 that had dyno'd 162 RWHP doing rollons, Steve's stock bike w/ just his flash literally would walk away every time! To make sure it wasn't the rider, he then traded bikes w/ his friend. Steve's bike still walked away, so it wasn't the rider making the difference. His friend had a full Area P exhaust, pulled secondary flies, PCV w/ autotune... it would start to come on strong and gain back after reaching 8000 rpm...
Word spread, and after lots of dyno testing (using the same dyno Ricky Gadson's mechanic uses for his bike), he started doing them for us guys on COG. The EVO flash (his latest version and the one I have) is like his 6th version.
He posted his stock bike's dyno chart in the beginning. Kawasaki's fueling maps had several places in various rpm's that reflected dips in the powerband. From 2-3000 rpm, it was very rich, and slow to climb. Then it would rocket upward, to another dip around 5000, then around 5700 it would go ballistic to 8000, where it would dip again, until the 9700 rpm redline.
The EVO chart shows linear, straight line power, from 2000 rpm to 9700.
No dips. In the realworld, using the old "butt dyno", I can sure tell the chart's not lying. The biggest improvement comes in the low rpm smoothness.
The C14 in stock form has a very "notchy" throttle. It's a dual cable system, but it can be very jerky at low speeds. It really annoyed me a few years back when I went to XSSE and rode Deal's Gap and the Dragon. Since Steve's flash... that problem's gone, and it's smooth as silk.
Yes, when it comes to C10's and now C14's...Steve's the man.
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