Charon is asking me if my proposed wimsy is actually cheating a bit.
Yep, in several ways. (I likes to cheat a bit, I do)
The extra quart or more of oil does increase mileage capacity of the oil load because I will be filtering half again to twice as much oil as originally equipped on a Savage.
Next, I will be putting the tank horizontally on the sissy bar right over the brake light. This appeals to me as being "out of the way" and not cluttering up the lines of the motor part of the bike. Plus it will look interesting sitting back there and everyone coming up behind me will wonder what the heck it is.
Heck, I may put me a name brand nitrous bottle sticker on it just for the giggles of it.
Next, the long quarter inch copper lines running to it and back will act as as an oil cooler. Cooled, cleaned oil being dumped back in the head will help cool that hot zone in a somewhat minor manner. Cam bearings, cam lobes and tappet flats will see some minor advantage from a steady bath of much cooler very clean oil.
Damming up the head pool such that it has an intentional extended oil exit chute to dump the running oil on the cam chain at the front guide junction can only help those two pieces to live longer.
Remember, I'm copying at 1/2 scale a bypass oil filter that is commonly used on 30 quart oil capacity 16 wheelers that run it for 10,000 miles between Bounty filter material changes.
Let's
ASSUME that I could filter 15 quarts of oil for a similar distance (using 1/2 scale factor -- just for discussions sake -- I know you won't really agree to assume anything, but that's OK) so factor in the idea we are only dealing with 3-4 quarts of oil and a 650 cc motor cycle engine instead of a 14,000 cc diesel engine pumping 30 quarts of oil we might assume to get some sort of 15x (less trash produced) life mulitiplier might theoretically apply to some sort of degree.
Too many Blackstone oil analysis done by too many truckers and BOBSTHEOILGUY combatants say the Bounty oil filter material works to get fine trash out of oil. Mind you, I have already removed all the ferrous materials with the supermagnet sitting on the main filter, all we are feeding this secondary bypass filter is the fine non-ferrous trash.
And yes, you will lose pressure going through the check valves and all that long tubing. I have an drain tap on the drum that I will use to vent air out of the system that can also be used to do a "incoming" volume check on the oil reaching the system back at the sissy bar. Unhooking the head piping can do a final "output" delivery check as well.
As long as the volume is appreciable as far as lubing the cam chain goes then the system "works well enough". Any light drool through the system would process the total system's 3-4 quarts of oil fairly quickly.
And the good news is that if it plugs itself up totally, why then I'm back to just using the stock Suzuki lubrication system, jest like da rest of youse guys.
And if I only change the oil once a year when I change the main oil filter element (still the weakest part of the overall system) then I can see if there is any difference in the non-ferrous trash build up on the filter element. Also, if cam chain wear out is eventually documented enough to create an averaged value then I could see if I get an noticable increase in cam chain life that could maybe might be a possible indicator of increased motor wear life.
Like the orange cat sez, "You gotta keep things in the proper kitty perspective"