Is that what they are for then. I was wondering about them. I thought they where just left over from where it was machined originally.correct the ballance? [the 3 shallow holes on the std one]
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Is that what they are for then. I was wondering about them. I thought they where just left over from where it was machined originally.correct the ballance? [the 3 shallow holes on the std one]
I know, but this is quite noticeable when accelerating, and without any negatives, bike is still smooth on closed throttle. So for me there is no point taking more.benny hedges wrote:you can take more off than that ;)
Lloydie, its a good question, and without the parts in my hands I may be making an incorrect assumptions, but I think you are right and wronglloydiecbr wrote:If it was trued up and no run out when it was placed in the turner it will be as balanced as it once was .
I read many threads about this before I had mine done .
If it was turned down correctly it don't need rebalanced as mark knows what he is doing I'm sure it will be fine
It's been said over on the hawk site. And the whole discussion on whether it should be re-balanced or not has almost turned into a fight in the usual Superhawk way.I am also quite sure that I read somewhere that roger agreed that if machined correctly and to true then there shouldn't be a need to balance.
As long as the imbalance is in the metal you are removing and not the magnets, then the more you machine off the better it will get. if it is in the magnets, then once you remove the balancing drillings, the imbalance will come back.gl_s_r wrote:I'll try and explain it a bit (my thoughts on it anyway)..
Imbalance should and will be reduced as the amount of material is removed..By that I mean the more material I remove the the more the imbalance will be less of a factor... even more so taking it from the diameters. I found the biggest imbalance to look at was the magnet basket (or whatever it is called) as when true on the taper that particular thing wobbled everywhere.. But as I machined that down as well then that imbalance should also have disappeared. All in all there isn't going to be that much to go wrong.. especially with a short throw crank like there is on the VTR and only two pistons that work in opposites.
I am also quite sure that I read somewhere that roger agreed that if machined correctly and to true then there shouldn't be a need to balance.
Now I've probably written all that for someone to blow my theories well out of the water ha ha ha!
yup you got it.... dynamic looks at asymmetric mass distribution which would cause a wobble about the axis . so this would be why you get wheel weights on both sides of the wheel rim, when weights on just 1 side would give you a static balance [bit simplistic but an easy way to visulaise],cybercarl wrote:Thanks for that Tony. I have heard of static and dynamic balance and did not no what the difference was. For some reason I though static meant still and dynamic being something in motion. So static being eccentric is more of a wobble like a cam shape, not a circle but more oval, and dynamic is a straight line side to side. Is that right, just trying to get my head around it. Ooo I've gone dizzy.![]()
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it will make a good difference you will like itRob wrote:Just fitted rob...'s lightened flywheel.
For anyone interested the weight (total including sprag clutch) was 4.3Kg
My original one was 5Kg. So about 12.5% less.
Haven't tried it yet - doing that tomorrow.
Me likey.lloydiecbr wrote:it will make a good difference you will like it