aka "Don't try this at home".hks_kansei wrote:I wouldn't want to be the one to find out
aka "Be Mindful of the Consequences".hks_kansei wrote:Basically, flywheels can let go, and when they do it's usually pretty dramatic (at 7000rpm there's a lot of centrifugal force on them).
Personally, I wouldn't use that flywheel for anything more than decoration, The bellhousing won't stop it, and in a lot of cases the trans tunnel does stuff all too. (at least in an MX5 the clutch is in front of your feet)
aka "Don't try this at home".StillIC wrote:zossy1 wrote:I think the flywheel would warp to a point that would render it almost undriveable before it failed.
Without a reasonable analysis of stress due to centrifugal force, versus strength of material at the temperature it was at when the stress was applied, this could be a dangerous assumption.
No worries guys Thankfully the poor wretch of a flywheel will live on with no mean nasty Consequence from any potential hot cracking.
Sailaholic will see to that and put it where heat can't get to it......happy ever after behind quad throttles and in front of a 4.78 diff.
sailaholic wrote:Thanks Keith.
I have the facilities through my contacts to mag particle / dye penetration test it to look for cracks.
Now that flywheel is sorted, lets pose the question of how to look at this Risk...by Probability or by Consequence ? How much weight do you give dire Consequence ?
Is the Consequence real or imagined ? If the Consequence is imagined, then saying "Who Cares" or "To Hell with the Consequence" or even "IDGAF" is perfectly reasonable.
Imagine if the earth was flat, the Consequence of sailing over the edge would be dire. But if the world was round, who cares ? Consequence would not matter.
So maybe it is worth wondering do we judge this poor wretched flywheel with flat earth thinking around Consequence or with round world thinking around Probability ?
Imagine the old days when all that could be envisaged were the Consequences.....Before Japanese engineers applied modern 4 cylinder learnings to the aging V8.....the Toyota UZ.
New World 4 valves, quad cams and a forged steel bottom end, deep skirt with 6 bolt mains, not Old World 2 valves, single cam, pushrods and cast iron bottom end, no skirt with 2 bolt mains.
Imagine a flywheel attached to these:
____________________Jap V8_____________________________________Yank V8_________________________
Now look at the imbalanced cast iron flywheel the Yanks attach to their flimsily held unbalanced cast iron crank.
_________Deep undercut Step __________________________Big Imbalance Weight Step
Then you find Yankee tuners make an art form out of front pulleys to try and sort their crank balancing/resonant crank mess out.
No other country in the world builds such fancy pulleys.....because other countries without the Consequences of old world V8s don't need a fancy pulley industry.
So given this and that big heavy flywheels store launch energy, drag racing and catastrophic flywheel ruptures tend to be synonymous.....ie their earth is flat....our earth is round.
Thank you Japan. Thank you for transforming cheap flat earth technology that was thought to be "the status quo" to affordable round world technology we all now can envisage.
BTW it is hard not to notice how these flat earth tuners are now even making their V8 pulleys an expensive 4 Cylinder Solution in search of a Problem elsewhere.
This is done by ignoring Probability and applying flat earth Consequence to the rest of the world which happens to be round. ("Round means stress range is kept under the endurance limit at the limits)
V8 flywheels with their cast iron construction, stepped cross sections and imbalanced construction, are a balancing nightmare for those running NASCAR, Drags or Moonshine.
However in a modern inline four world that is already balanced and round, the evidence is not there to give weight to incipient catastrophic failure mode of flat earth cast iron.
Take a look at the crank comparison on a 351 Ford verses a Mazda BP (5750 cc Vs 1840 cc). Easy to imagine the V8 crank and its flywheel having a few more torsional issues.
_______________________Ford 351 V8 (5750 cc) SG Cast Iron ________________________________________________Mazda BP (1840cc) Forged Steel
Just from a size/weight perspective the poor old V8 crank carries 300% more torque and suffers 60% more torque impulse in a cast iron crankshaft.
For serious stuff it is obviously a throw away crank at just half the endurance limit of the forged steel BP crankshaft despite being of malleable quality, and having 25% more unit mass.
Furthermore the unbalanced V8 flywheel is held on by 6 x 7/16 (11.1mm) bolts on a 75mm PCD compared with 6 x M12 bolts on a 65mm PCD holding on the BP flywheel.
Doing the sums means the BP flywheel is 1% more strongly fastened than the 5.7 litre V8 flywheel.
Despite everything going for OEM bolts on a BP crank, it seems ARP bolts are still necessary to qualify for NASCAR status (on the earth's flat side).
The above argument and evidence makes the case that Consequence is real for Ford USA fans but imaginery for Mazda Japan fans because one thinks flat and the other thinks round.
Getting back to our tragic and sad CrMo flywheel, the Probability of incipient catastrophic failure mode in low power road or circuit use provided there is no cracks present is practically zero.
This is because of a belief in an ultimate ductile failure mode, distorting not disintegrating itself and its surrounding protective structures. It is so clean and simple you can imagine the FEA.
The material toughness and the smooth 2D transitional cross sections gives stress nowhere to concentrate itself to give rise to heat cycle induced fatigue.
Stress wants to just flow nicely in this flywheel, because it has no stiff constraints attracting stress or holes/transitions concentrating stress, except of course around the bolt holds in the centre.
The worst failure I could imagine is unacceptable TIR (Total Indicator Runout) from heat induced warping found when it is bolted up to a crank.
The question boils down to this....Ultra lightweight flywheels are clearly unsuited for certain applications involving high power clutch slip, whether previously hot spotted or not.
It is obvious from the appearance of this one, it was too light for the turbo motor and its modulation through the clutch.
The worst hot spotting consequence I could find in Google search was warping and clutch chatter. A heavier duty one is better for turbo use.
This all begs the question, what about aluminium ? Given all the crank balance/vibration issues in the USA, maybe alloy flywheels fall into the category of "Don't try this at home".
Since aluminium has an endurance limit near zero, it becomes an eventuality that unless the fatigue load spectrum is properly managed someone must face the Consequences.
Aluminium is soft and score marks in areas of high stress initiate cracks. The question is when does it get inspected, tested and scrapped ? Is it serial numbered and pre-failure maintained ?
Funnily enough the manufacturer's website promoted Replacement Steel parts but not Replacement Aluminium parts.
The manufacturer is Mindful of the Consequences though, and so too will the customer be if they care to "Read the Instructions" !
Extract from Manufacturer's Instructions.
FOR ANY PERFORMANCE/RACE USE VEHICLE: Inspect flywheel whenever possible for fatigue, cracks,
damage or adverse wear. Some of the most critical areas to inspect are: (1) The crankshaft register (2)
Flywheel to crank mounting holes (3) Ring Gear. Extreme heat can adversely affect the dowels and ring gear.
Extreme heat can, as with any flywheel, affect the ring gear causing it to grow and not return to its static
diameter, possibly causing eventual ring gear failure. Precautions must be taken in performance use
vehicles to avoid this dangerous situation. The use of a scatter shield or safety blanket for the clutch and
flywheel area is a MUST in all performance/race use vehicles.