Is anyone pursuing modern electronica for throttle control?
I'm sorta on record as experimenting with it for the last few years, but it's mostly been sitting on top of my oscilloscope, taunting me while I do paying work. Brett's comments discouraged me, because I give him about a 70% chance of being correct, and within the remaining 30% I give it about a 50% chance that you need to have as much arcane knowledge, and maybe even rework capability* of 2-stroke engines as you do to make tuned pipes work correctly.
* I base this on what I know about the difference between (4-stroke) drag race engines vs. short-track race engines. For a drag racer, you build the engine so that all of the intake and exhaust passages are BIG, for maximal power output. As a consequence, at part throttle the air doesn't move very quickly inside the engine, and as a consequence of
that, throttle response sucks. A short-track engine, OTOH, uses much smaller intake and exhaust passages, a much smaller carburetor, etc.. It has significantly less power at the top end, but when you blip the throttle you get power
right now. I assume the same holds true for 2-stroke engines; I suspect that an engine built for good throttle response at 9000 RPM will have a smaller carb than one built for max power at 20,000RPM, and probably a smaller intake port, transfer passages, and exhaust port to boot. Brett suspects that an exhaust throttle would fix all of this; he may be correct, but I suspect that an engine designed for maximum torque at 9000RPM would do better even with the exhaust throttle.