View Full Version : Can someone help explain the mechanics of proper flywheel weight
darkostoj
04-21-2020, 07:38 PM
Hey guys!
I'm working on something a little weird...
I see many aftermarket companies are making lightweight flywheels. Why?
Here are the questions I can think of to get a discussion going.
1. How do we mathematically figure out the perfect flywheel weight?
2. What is the advantage of having a light or heavy flywheel?
3. What happens when you go too light or too heavy?
4. Do we apply the same principals from a traditional manual transmission to a new style dual clutch transmission?
CJD Automotive
04-22-2020, 07:36 AM
Think of flywheel weight as an inertia weight. The heavier mass of a flywheel helps to keep the rotating assembly turning when loaded, Moment Of Inertia. Old tractors used massive flywheels that allowed low output engines to perform without stalling. So the engine is slow to lose rpm, but also slow to accelerate rpm. That's the balance. Heavier cars need more flywheel mass to keep from dragging down the engine rpm and stalling when accelerating from a dead stop. Lighter cars need less. Race cars want as little as possible so they can accelerate the engine quickly, i.e off turns and between shifts. Ever watch race cars leave the pit? They don't leave at 5K+ rpm and spin tires because it looks cool, if they don't rev the engine high when leaving from a dead stop, it will stall, because of the low flywheel/clutch weight (MOI).
I'm sure others can explain it better!
Ideal weight is subjective. Some people find cars difficult to drive that others don't. From my personal experience, 30lbs total clutch/flywheel weight is about as low as comfortable for a street car in the 3500 lb. range. Mid to high 30# seems to work best for most people on street cars. Again this is subjective, I promise someone will jump on and say they use a 7-1/4" clutch with 20# total weight clutch/flywheel and it drives like a new car...
Most new cars, Mustang, Corvette, Challenger, etc, use clutch/flywheel combo's in excess of 50# total flywheel/clutch weight.
I can attest to having a lighter weight flywheel is not the most pleasant in stop and go traffic in the Bay Area. When I do rarely engage smoothly in 1st at lower rpm's, it a small win that makes me feel for a brief amount of time that I have tamed the beast. Definitely swapping it out at the next clutch replacement, oh and getting a new t56 shifter that doesn't f&%king leak.
F'in mine
04-22-2020, 12:29 PM
I think Craig in his above post did a good job explaining things, here's a post I have on file from Ram that gives info on flywheel selecting.
https://ramclutches.com/clutch-university-chapter-4/
Vegas69
04-22-2020, 02:39 PM
I loved the aluminum flywheel on my ZL-1 big block, but there is more mass there naturally than most set ups. It did cause more severe shifting issues in my tko 600. Of course as I always say, that trans belongs in a school bus!
CarlC
04-22-2020, 06:52 PM
I can attest to having a lighter weight flywheel is not the most pleasant in stop and go traffic in the Bay Area. When I do rarely engage smoothly in 1st at lower rpm's, it a small win that makes me feel for a brief amount of time that I have tamed the beast. Definitely swapping it out at the next clutch replacement, oh and getting a new t56 shifter that doesn't f&%king leak.
Which shifter is that?
Which shifter is that?
My stock t56 shifter is leaking from the boot.
vBulletin® v3.8.11, Copyright ©2000-2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.