I don't know why he had such trouble... he sent me a comparison chart that measured static balance as percentages which I didn't entirely get.sean brady scooters wrote:seriously though ,i would be interested to know why he had probs ,and why he thinks its impossible ?Ginch wrote:Hi Sean & Dan,
I've only recently seen this thread. The crank looks great and the open path from the inlet is impressive.
A german friend however says that it's pretty much impossible to statically balance this kind of crank. He's done a fair few and says he still has one similar to yours that didn't work due to lack of balance. I'd love to prove him wrong... can you please give your view on this?
If I was to buy one, what is the best base crank for you to start with?
there are two ways basically to balance something ,you can either add weight like on a car wheel (lead weights ) hence increasing the overall weight or remove weight like the drillings on a flywheel ..hence achieving balance at a reduced weight ...and without giving too many trade secrets away i prefer the latter...if metal is removed concentrically and uniformly balance is surely maintained
?...just like a 1500 gram flywheel can be just as balanced as a 3000 gram one
the trick is to obviously increase the flow rate (remove the obstructions ) whilst maintaining a balanced crank ..its not rocket science !
Anyway I guess you can't really balance them as you go because you don't know what weight piston the buyer is going to put on there.
Are you able to fit a longer rod at the same time? And how would that, and the lack of a big chunk of crank web affect power - I mean as far as the larger crankcase volume is concerned? I run a 221 Malossi Sport (currently rotary valve), what difference would I expect with this crank?
Cartmel, thanks for the users perspective, very helpful! Just wondering why you started with a crank that had already been worked instead of the base crank?
Is the dyno you're talking about in the dyno section? Or in the Vespa dyno part? I can't see anything recent.