A Short History of Single-Sided Swingarms And Why They’re Dying Out
‘Mono arms’ are a dying breed – here’s why they rose and fell
I'd wonder how a belt would deal with the bat shit crazy acceleration on my super DukeIt's form over function for chain drive but for shafts it makes perfect sense. With a chain there's a lot of engineering required to contain the torsional drive forces operating at 90 degrees to the spindle axis, so there's a built-in need for over-engineering. With a shaft you don't have that problem and a twin spar becomes unecessary and would itself constitute over-enginnering.
I can't see single siders ever disappearing from shaft-driven bikes. If they do from chain drives, I can understand it from a cost and engineering standpoint but I would miss the advantages for the owner in cleaning, wheel removal and rear brake servicing.
As a shaft drive owner I must admit I don't miss the chore of chain maintenance and the constant tension adjusting when it starts to wear, but I wouldn't want one on just any bike. Makes absolute sense on the Rocket 3 where a chain would have to be enormous and it's got so much power and torque to start with that the tiny bit absorbed by the shaft is meaningless.
What I don't understand is why more use is not made of belt drive. I experienced it for the first time when I had my Harley and it's a joy to live with. Saps very little power, it's light, quiet, clean and almost maintenance free. Tension and alignment is critical or rapid wear will result. But once set up correctly it's very low maintenance and easy to live with, and would be better for single sided swinging arms as it is lighter and so exerts less inertia and it doesn't doesn't need wide or frequent adjustment.
I see no reason why sports bikes and nakeds couldn't use belts. On track bikes you need to be able to alter the gearing by changing sprockets but the vast majority of sports and nakeds never see track action serious enough to warrant sprocket changes.
No problem at all. It's a taughtly sprung chassis without super-long suspension travel with lots of lash, which belts don't like, and it would sap less power than a chain so the bike woud feel even more responsive.I'd wonder how a belt would deal with the bat shit crazy acceleration on my super Duke![]()
Those are cam belts. Final drive belts are rather different beasts and slipping and cog jumping won't trash your engine, just as a knackered chain won't (not that you should ever allow either to reach that point). The point is well made though that cam belts on cars are more likely to fail from tooth sheering than actual snapping. A garage who replaced the belts in my car once pointed this out to me. I'd said they looked brand new but they were due for changing based on mileage so I supposed we'd better do it.