There
is probably no greater beginning upgrade you can make than
Stage One which is entirely a bolt-on procedure. If you
want you can take this upgrade
one step at a time however, I recommend going in the order listed above if
not all at once.
Free
Breathing Air Cleaner
This is the simplest upgrade to
perform for most Harley owners. Depending on your budget
this ranges from changing the air cleaner to a K&N
or other element, to installing higher end air cleaner
assemblies like Forcewinders and Hyperchargers. At minimum
you need to let your engine breath by changing the stock
air cleaner. You don't have to spend a fortune but pick
something that fits your bike well. If your plan is to
keep the look of your current cover assembly go with Screamin'
Eagle or Arlen Ness "Big Sucker" assemblies.
These allow you to use your stock cover but the difference
over stock is amazing.
Free
Breathing Exhaust As with the air cleaner this
upgrade can be simple or extreme. Many choose to keep their
stock
pipes and go with slip-on mufflers. These are easy to install,
maintains a stock look, and adds plenty of performance.
Popular slip-on models include HD Screamin' Eagle II, Cycle
Shack, Bubs, and Khrome Werks to name a few. My favorites
are the ones from D&D and Vance & Hines, but the
others are very good.
Rejetted
Carburetor or Remapped EFI Once your engine is
breathing it's going to need to do a better job at providing
a stable
fuel mixture. Your carburetor or EFI will need to be corrected
to compensate for how differently the engine now breathes.
On carbureted models this means re-jetting. Various kits
are available to recalibrate the carburetor including those
offered by Dynojet, Yost, and our own Stage One Carb Kit.
EFI models are another story. Fuel injected models use
a preprogrammed map to instruct how much fuel is to be
delivered. Since you have changed the way the engine breaths,
those instructions may not supply the proper stable fuel
mixture under all conditions. Granted your bike will still
run, but the only way you are going to get the most out
of your EFI bike is to have it remapped by a qualified
shop. There are simple ways to do this yourself using devices
like the Power Commander, which will be detailed in a future
article.
Upgraded
Ignition Under certain circumstances you can go
without this upgrade and still accomplish a Stage 1 upgrade.
Particularly
with Twin Cam models, which already use a single fire ignition.
Aftermarket TC88 ignitions offer higher rev limits and
altered advance curves but unless you plan on hitting 6200
RPM (you shouldn't anyway!) then stock is just fine. Evo
and earlier models have Dual-fire ignitions and can really
benefit from the single-fire upgrade. Crain High-4 Single
fire ignition is an excellent performance upgrade for Evo
(1340cc) engines.
That's
really the core to performing a Stage 1 upgrade. The next
step is Stage 2 which includes a cam upgrade, and Stage
3 (and 4 and beyond) include upgrading your heads, big
bore cylinders, and stroker kits. Future articles and reviews
are in the works to talk more about these stages and upgrades.
Thanks
for your time!
Frank Klaczak
Service Manager |