Carbon Fiber reeds are strong enough.....you just need a larger cage and maybe get slightly thicker carbon fiber. Pipes aren't a huge deal on 2 strokes as they all run at powerbands in higher RPMS regardless. Biggest problem would be idling and low speed performance. You would need to match an EFI that is mapped correctly for that individual bike setup.......which is always a fun task to determine how to map it. Finding a sufficient turbo is a bit of a painstaking task as you want something that stays within your limits of boost and can spool effectively coming out of a pipe with a expansion chamber like 2 stroke quads have.....if not....unknown amounts of backpressure will remain in the pipe stopping you in your tracks from the get go as you aren't flowing enough exhaust. Doing this from a known point is quite easy.....doing it on a raw plan on a bike with little info is a little tougher. I'm willing to bet none of these guys with turboed and SCed setups really have an "ideal" setup. Yea...it functions.....yea it's fast....but it doesn't quite work in congruence with each other in a way to maximize reliability and performance. Stuff like that takes a lot of trial and error and R&D work with tools that I'm guessing they don't have.
here is your lesson for the day
1) carbon fiber reeds suck. they can not take the opening and closing well, they are too brittle and shatter. the steel lines reeds are able to flex better without too much troble.
2) not all pipes operated at the same RPM range. some are designed for lower rpm power and some are higher rpm power. meaning different powerband ranges.
3) for the turbo set up, i am sure the major turbo companies can help out. i know when i was talking to turbonetics when i was planning on doing a turbo on my zilla, they said they could get me the correct compresser wheel for the turbo of my choice.
4) EFI is not hard to tune when you have the correct stuff. just need a way to measure the a/f ratio and how to change the fuel pressure.
1: I've never seen a carbon fiber reed shatter, fray, or malfunction. That's on my bikes, my friend's, or anybody I've ran into. As long as the weave is strong and the resin used is able to withstand heat, there shouldn't be an issue since carbon fiber is stronger/lighter than pure steel.
2: Not all pipes operate in the same range, but 2 strokes without powervalves even on "low end" pipes are operating at higher RPM ranges for the respective powerband than your common day 4 stroke and produce less torque.
3: I don't know the major turbo companies that work with raptors and all that jazz so I can't say.
4: When you have the correct stuff are the key words.
it isn't the strength that is the problem. it is the frequency of them opening and closing. banshee people break them all the time.
turbo need pressure to spin. the main down fall of 2-strokes and turbos. you need "overrev" ability. lots of pipes dont have this. they fall flat on their face at certain rpms. this will cause the turbo to lose boost, not good.
My guess is they were inferior carbon fiber designs and/or the reed cage no longer had the cushioned rubber seal on the cage causing it to impact on the metal of the cage. Carbon fiber has a VASTLY higher tensile strength to almost every kind of steel and steel alloy you can think of and one of the beauties of carbon fiber is it's ability to withstand the stress of bending.....it's actually one of the secondary reasons why reed manufacturer's use it aside form the fact that it's lighter.