I have only balanced 1 set of flywheels so have no experience with how it affects the feel of the bike. What would we feel if we took the same engine and it was at 50% and we moved it to 60%? Or 40%? I rebuilt my 26 JD and had almost no ride time on the bike. When I took the engine apart it already had some kind of I believe UL piston in it. I used some new aluminum "high compression" pistons from a distributor in the hobby. We balanced each wheel using 58%. We needed to add lead to the holes that were already drilled, and even drilled more to I believe (7) deep, 1/2" dia holes in each wheel, pounded in lead, then threaded in a bolt to secure it, and cut it off flush with the wheel.
In a search of posts I found one person who did back engineer his 45 wheels and found a set at 44%, and most at around 50%.
For my bike, if I rev the engine on the rear stand it will "dance" on a smooth floor. Not at dead idle, you need to rev it noticeably (not a normal practice). The 64 panhead does not do anything like this. Riding, there is a pronounced vibe at low speed, which will make the front fork "bounce", (some improvement by retarding the timing) say in first as you move from a stop, or at a walking speed, but in riding speed, say 20 and up I don't feel any noticeable vibration. I've had it to 65 mph. So, any vibration I am thinking to be worried about is down low.
It is my understanding the balance factor can affect the range the vibration will occur- meaning one factor could move it to an upper rpm range, and another to a lower range? I suspect its better to have a vibe at a low speed low rpm, rather than upper range where riding occurs mostly?
Thanks to everyone for this discussion.
In a search of posts I found one person who did back engineer his 45 wheels and found a set at 44%, and most at around 50%.
For my bike, if I rev the engine on the rear stand it will "dance" on a smooth floor. Not at dead idle, you need to rev it noticeably (not a normal practice). The 64 panhead does not do anything like this. Riding, there is a pronounced vibe at low speed, which will make the front fork "bounce", (some improvement by retarding the timing) say in first as you move from a stop, or at a walking speed, but in riding speed, say 20 and up I don't feel any noticeable vibration. I've had it to 65 mph. So, any vibration I am thinking to be worried about is down low.
It is my understanding the balance factor can affect the range the vibration will occur- meaning one factor could move it to an upper rpm range, and another to a lower range? I suspect its better to have a vibe at a low speed low rpm, rather than upper range where riding occurs mostly?
Thanks to everyone for this discussion.
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