And I thought Americans were bad with "If a little is good, a lot must be better"........
That is some serious material removal.
When I did mine I looked at all these options and went with what we called the 'Moriwaki" spec at that time.
This is just a simple 13mm cut off the O.D. of the weight.
I didn't go lighter for a couple of reasons.
First looking at the firing order of 270-450
I would think that a extremely light
flywheel could cause issues at low\lower RPMs during that 450 degrees of crank rotation when the engine is basically just coasting and using the energy in the
flywheel to keep things spinning.
Another way to look at it is you need
flywheel weight to have that big fat torque curve, the lighter it get the more "peaky" the engine gets.
Then there is the "balance" issue.
There were 2 opinions on this concerning the
flywheel and 1 other issue I see as someone who spent a couple of years balancing engine rotating assemblies for a living.
On the
flywheel the "Mori" set up was passed on by Bob H. (RIP) and he also stated there was no re-balancing needed with this mod.
This makes sense as you are not taking a lot of weight off but the engine does spin up much quicker.
Which makes this the way to go on the street IMHO as you still get a factory like idle.
The there is the Revolution spec, which also came with the information that you need to balance it afterwards.
This also make sense as these engines do spin high rpms and you have removed enough material with this method that you "might" have issues at the top of the rev range.
I also look at this a a "Race" set up not only due to the extra expense of balancing but also I would say that this is light enough to start loosing some bottom end which means the idle will also start to get finicky.
Then there is the last issue of not knowing first if the factory balances the rotating assembly with the
flywheel weight attached or if they use it as a harmonic balancer\damper
If they do either one and you change the weight too much you get too the point where you nee to balance the complete rotating assembly or you might be in for a nasty surprise.
So I do find it interesting watching these threads and look forward to hearing the out come but personally I stick to the two methods I listed.
I figure both of those sources had plenty of flywheels and engines to play with and stopped taking weight off when they did for a reason.
Carry on

Loud pipes don't save lives, knowing how to ride your bike will save your life.