frank
Club Member
nah, diy balance ftw and still running the same f/w 5 yrs laterBalancing machine are very clever bits of kit. I'd send it to have it done. My crank and flywheel cost £120 to lighten and balance
nah, diy balance ftw and still running the same f/w 5 yrs laterBalancing machine are very clever bits of kit. I'd send it to have it done. My crank and flywheel cost £120 to lighten and balance
you mean whats the back look like ?I knew i seen a video of a home made one !!!!!
Whats on the other side frank ????
yes mate, keep is simple innitOr is that just on bearings free rolling ?
yes a bar that fitted into the bearing, and the f/w is more critical than the crankLove to hear this lightened flywheel it is i dont want to drill as many holes if thats possible , just want to lighten in by skimming it on lathe and then try and balance it
I assume that its just a bar going through ? You didnt bother touching crank shaft ?
pre-facelift look better mate
Oh the silage tape well its not as if that cost me so ill rip it off and see what its like if i miss it theres a roll in the shed lolIMO lose the badboy tape
God dam carbs, I'm having issues too, gotta get the jets right mate makes all the differencehaving serious issue's getting the car to run :/ sometimes it starts perfectly and now i just cant get it to go, im conivnced its not the SU i think i have an ignition problem, or my bigger fear that the timing is out may just take the engine out altogether and do a few bits if thats the case
Yup. But they'll be a fair few things plugged inAweful lot of wiires for something that simple ?
Can soon get it balanced. But I'm sure you'd notice if it was out on the latheNo problem if your willing to chance it without balancing like i am ?
Sure...Would you mind explaining the friction plate more ? So i know what to get
The downside being by reducing the contact patch you increase the heat generated when slipping, so you have to adjust your driving style slightly to prevent burning up the clutch. Not a big deal mind.Sure...
Say a pressure plate exert 180lbs of force on the friction plate
A standard friction has say an inch thick band of material all the way round. Lets say 18 inches. So its 18 square inches.
180lbs of force over 18 square inches is 10pounds per square inch
If you use a 6 paddle clutch you're then taking 6 chunks put the friction plate. If they are an inch in width. Thats 1 square inch each x 6 = 6square inches now missing.
This leaves 12square inches of material on the friction plate.
The same 180lbs of force applied over 12 square inches is now 15pounds per square inch.
You've increased clutch clamping force but not increased the effort your foot has to make
People dont tend to break clutches into components and you've probably seen it often how a high clamping clutch has to be mega stiff and unusable daily... its not the case. If you actually understand clutches its quite simple to increase clamping force without physical effort. Something new to hear for many I'm sure
Very true that's why I avoid 3/4paddle platesThe downside being by reducing the contact patch you increase the heat generated when slipping, so you have to adjust your driving style slightly to prevent burning up the clutch. Not a big deal mind.