CDF6333!
Please remember that H-D used a factor closer to 50%;
(I just back-calculated a '55 FLH to 52%.)
The differing cylinder angle, as well as different frame mounting, calls for a different optimum factor (as explained by Herr Elvenkemper in the VI Flywheel Workshop discussion.)
Please note also that H-D went to a grossly larger left flywheel, without issue. Making the two wheels equal makes one feel good, but it really isn't in the basic balancing formula.
Neither is total flymass, but the need for 'stored torque' is why H-D did it. Lightening the total flymass allows for quicker acceleration into the peak horsepower range, but it is a trade-off.
In my attachment, you can see where a 101 flywheel has been set into a lathe chuck, and sitting in a pan of oil. Over it has been placed a clear acrylic box. Note the lines of oil sprayed upward from the sides of the wheel, but little or none from the outside diameter of the wheel.
Reducing the 'windage' area of the wheels reduces their ability to pick up sump oil to be scavanged by a scraper. So radical shaving of the wheels should be reserved for competition machines, and not daily workhorses.
....Cotten
Please remember that H-D used a factor closer to 50%;
(I just back-calculated a '55 FLH to 52%.)
The differing cylinder angle, as well as different frame mounting, calls for a different optimum factor (as explained by Herr Elvenkemper in the VI Flywheel Workshop discussion.)
Please note also that H-D went to a grossly larger left flywheel, without issue. Making the two wheels equal makes one feel good, but it really isn't in the basic balancing formula.
Neither is total flymass, but the need for 'stored torque' is why H-D did it. Lightening the total flymass allows for quicker acceleration into the peak horsepower range, but it is a trade-off.
In my attachment, you can see where a 101 flywheel has been set into a lathe chuck, and sitting in a pan of oil. Over it has been placed a clear acrylic box. Note the lines of oil sprayed upward from the sides of the wheel, but little or none from the outside diameter of the wheel.
Reducing the 'windage' area of the wheels reduces their ability to pick up sump oil to be scavanged by a scraper. So radical shaving of the wheels should be reserved for competition machines, and not daily workhorses.
....Cotten
Comment