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Lightened flywheel
- mercutio
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they have used 2 different alloys to manage the heat movement i am sure given the same treatment even a solid flywheel would show warpage
Your the engineer Phil you now more than me about why they would use different materials together to cope with heat?
Your the engineer Phil you now more than me about why they would use different materials together to cope with heat?
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- 4thgenphil
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I wouldn't, you get warping when you have 2 different metals heated at the same time, like your ally head on a steel block.
like i said, im not sure how much abuse this flywheel had, it could have been smashed from new with a clutch and pressure plate like mine. For a road car with a sensible clutch probably will be ok but for a full on track/drag car i wouldn't consider it.
like i said, im not sure how much abuse this flywheel had, it could have been smashed from new with a clutch and pressure plate like mine. For a road car with a sensible clutch probably will be ok but for a full on track/drag car i wouldn't consider it.

- wurlycorner
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Not looked at a Fidanza, so I don't know where they have used one metal and where the other, but...mercutio wrote:they have used 2 different alloys to manage the heat movement
I can't see how heat soak would come into that choice at all - I would more suspect using 2 different metals for cost/durability trade-off.
Getting something light but also hard enough for the ring gear teeth, is expensive, so use something cheap and light for the main bulk of it and something heavier (but harder and more expensive) for the outer edge... (as I said though, I haven't seen a Fidanza, so I don't know where they've used what, so don't know if that's what they've actually done...)
--
Iain.
Iain.
Super Secret 1G (not really super secret!)
I might be wrong saying this but a flywheel should not really get that hot.
The only time it will heat up when the cluch slips due to either to to wore plates, too much torque for clutch or driver slipping cluch when setting off.
The flywheel probably failed due to the drive riding the cluch overheating it.
I am using a alloy flywheel for the 7.25 cluch and I have no worries about using it.
I would also happily use the fidanza flywheel if I was using a standard cluch plate.
The only time it will heat up when the cluch slips due to either to to wore plates, too much torque for clutch or driver slipping cluch when setting off.
The flywheel probably failed due to the drive riding the cluch overheating it.
I am using a alloy flywheel for the 7.25 cluch and I have no worries about using it.
I would also happily use the fidanza flywheel if I was using a standard cluch plate.