850 Tuning
#1
Posted 02 January 2011 - 11:31 PM
I have recently brought a 1980 Austin mini 850, i love it but its a bit "slow"
Does anyone have any simple and cheap tuning ideas?????
Thanks
#2
Posted 02 January 2011 - 11:48 PM
Start with a better head, either by gas-flowing the one that's fitted and putting in bigger valves, or by finding a 998 Cooper head and skimming it to get the compression ratio correct at about 9.3:1 maximum. Don't go much higher as the pistons are not as good as 998 ones.
Then get an HS4 carb to replace the HS2 and a better inlet and exhaust manifold. An original Cooper 998 exhaust system is good to do.
You can change the cam on the 850 without removing the engine and the Kent 256 is good for an 850.
Just don't go revving it too hard as the crankshaft rev limit is only about 6500 maximum with a sustained 6000 maybe pushing your luck a bit.
A sensibly modified 850 can give around 44 bhp with reliability which at 10 bhp increase is really good.
I hope this helps
Edited by Cooperman, 03 January 2011 - 12:31 AM.
#3
Posted 03 January 2011 - 12:19 AM
#4
Posted 03 January 2011 - 12:31 AM
#5
Posted 03 January 2011 - 11:19 AM
#6
Posted 03 January 2011 - 11:24 AM
Easily out did this young tit in a thou that was in the my mini club at the time
#7
Posted 03 January 2011 - 01:54 PM
One other thing to remember is that on the 850 the cam ran directly in the block with no cam bearings. In order to get reliability with a modded 850, proper cam bearings must be fitted, which means line-boring the block.
#8
Posted 03 January 2011 - 03:18 PM
Im planning a very highly strung 850, but It costs a bomb and its almost impossible to find parts so I may just go down the 998 route.
The same theory applies for every a series.
Better fueling, better breathing, different camshaft, different compression ratio and off you go.
you can make them reasonable but its always going to feel slugish, some people love that though. Most dont which is why so many people threw there 850's away and now parts are like hens teeth!
#9
Posted 03 January 2011 - 03:28 PM
Edited by project mini chris, 03 January 2011 - 03:29 PM.
#10
Posted 03 January 2011 - 03:45 PM
#11
Posted 03 January 2011 - 03:56 PM
12g295 998 cooper heads will go straight onto your 850. Then maybe a stage 1 kit, Electronic ignition, modified camshaft?, maybe even a hs4 or twin SU carbs?
Not quite straight on as they need quite a bit skimmed off to get the C.R. correct (like about 0.090"), but, yes, they do just bolt on and are a very good modification once skimmed correctly. It is important to get the C.R. to just over 9:1 if still running split-skirt pistons.
If only the competition cranks were still around. Not seen one in years. I got my first 850 48 years ago this April. At the time it felt quite quick with an improved head, better valve springs and a richer carb needle! Those were the days - single leading shoe drum brakes and 145/80 x 10 Michelin 'X' radial ply tyres.
For the road, around 45 bhp can still be reliable and then the 850 goes very well, especially as the early ones were quite light in weight and didn't have as much drag from things like wheel arch extensions, wide tyres and huge wing mirrors. In fact, wing mirrors were not standard and my Minis didn't have any back then. Dear little cars!
#12
Posted 03 January 2011 - 10:43 PM
#13
Posted 03 November 2018 - 09:57 AM
Take a look at this video, 850 Mini, 12G295 head and Injection (Canems ECU with MPI parts) , rest of the engine untouched (And profesional driver....)
Edited by Authi, 03 November 2018 - 10:01 AM.
#14
Posted 05 November 2018 - 09:19 PM
The limitation with the 850 is the crankshaft. Sure the split-skirt pistons were not too strong, but solid-skirt ones cured that. The standard crankshaft, even balanced, really is limited to around 6500 rpm. In the 60's it was possible to get a competition crank which was good for 7500 rpm
Surely the modern 848 will be stronger, the last few I have seen are EN16T, and with the bearing overlap more than a 998 ?
Someone may know were all the A plus 848's an EN16T crank ?
I would be using 998 pistons which gives you a good choice and more cc's too...998 + 0.080 will be about 950cc
The max at 68mm bore you would have a short stroke 996, which would not be torquey but fairly revvy
the 848 the crank being the same stroke as the 1071 S
#15
Posted 05 November 2018 - 10:06 PM
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