I'll throw my .02 into this....
As a Harley owner also, I'm familar with their mufflers. As Doug said, jetting is affected by the amount of air getting into the motor; more air, bigger jets. Now, generally speaking, when changing only the mufflers on a Harley (or drilling the baffles for more 'sound'), no jetting changes are needed. You still have the restriction of the stock airbox, so the amount of air getting in will be unchanged. So jetting changes are unneeded with only a muffler change, and any 'fine tuning' can generally be done by moving the c-clip on the needle (usually down one notch).
Stock Harley mufflers, even drilled ones, are pretty restrictive; a freer-flowing muffler and AC change will gain you roughly 20% more power on a dead-stock Harley (no, that's not a typo) but as was pointed out, the pulses are much larger compared to a XS11. I'd try stock jetting as a 'baseline', then go from there...
'78E original owner
As a Harley owner also, I'm familar with their mufflers. As Doug said, jetting is affected by the amount of air getting into the motor; more air, bigger jets. Now, generally speaking, when changing only the mufflers on a Harley (or drilling the baffles for more 'sound'), no jetting changes are needed. You still have the restriction of the stock airbox, so the amount of air getting in will be unchanged. So jetting changes are unneeded with only a muffler change, and any 'fine tuning' can generally be done by moving the c-clip on the needle (usually down one notch).
Stock Harley mufflers, even drilled ones, are pretty restrictive; a freer-flowing muffler and AC change will gain you roughly 20% more power on a dead-stock Harley (no, that's not a typo) but as was pointed out, the pulses are much larger compared to a XS11. I'd try stock jetting as a 'baseline', then go from there...
'78E original owner
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