Should I get a flywheel

supra8903

New Member
Jan 12, 2006
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Im in need for a clutch and Im wondering if I should get a new flywheel, or should I just het mine resurfaced. Any coment or good flywheels please let me know.
How much do they really do. I have already removed my fan from the h2o pump.


Joe
 

oscolivar1

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Feb 8, 2006
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Virginia beach
supra8903 said:
Im in need for a clutch and Im wondering if I should get a new flywheel, or should I just het mine resurfaced. Any coment or good flywheels please let me know.
How much do they really do. I have already removed my fan from the h2o pump.


stock flywheels are pretty heavy....
if u get a lighter one if frees up about 15 hp.... and faster revving....
what do u mean how much do they really do ??? hp u mean??
 
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IJ.

Grumpy Old Man
Mar 30, 2005
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I come from a land down under
Yes

A flywheel stores energy.

It may take more load to get it turning if it's heavier so slower acceleration but it doesn't actually "give hp" if you lighten it.

If you go too light in a fat pig Mk3 you can hurt drivability down low.
 

GrimJack

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Dec 31, 1969
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idriders.com
I picked up one - mostly because I didn't want to pull the existing one and wait to have it machined, I wanted a 6 hour swap, and me driving the car again without any downtime.

I haven't been sorry yet, picked up the RPS billet flywheel.
 

T34418L3ONE

Supra for brains.....
Jul 3, 2005
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it doesnt add horsepower, it just lowers the amount lost through the drivetrain. Same with the aluminum driveshaft, the less weight the motor has to turn the more power is available to the wheels.
 

Stretch

Tallest MK3 driver ever!!
Mar 30, 2005
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I was just thinking maybe to get the best of both worlds a company could make a super lightweight wheel, probably out of chromoly that would be the skeleton for the friction plates and ring gears only. That wheel would weight probably around 4-6 pounds, so your car would easily fly from the start, and then as the flywheel turned quicker it could act like some sort of electric generator and create a magnetic field to draw rings of metal onto the disk surface to add weight as you went faster, to keep a smooth acceleration, and so as you decelerated the rings would be pulled off the wheel again and the flywheel would be light and easy to rev.
Maybe I'm just nuts today also :icon_razz
eric
 
Dec 3, 2003
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supra8903 said:
Im in need for a clutch and Im wondering if I should get a new flywheel, or should I just het mine resurfaced. Any coment or good flywheels please let me know.
How much do they really do. I have already removed my fan from the h2o pump.


Joe

I run an OEM flywheel and is what I would suggest in doing. Best bang for the buck. You can get yours resurfaced or give Champion Toyota a call. They have good prices.

I run decent hp and have no problems

Duane
 
Dec 3, 2003
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GrimJack said:
I picked up one - mostly because I didn't want to pull the existing one and wait to have it machined, I wanted a 6 hour swap, and me driving the car again without any downtime.

I haven't been sorry yet, picked up the RPS billet flywheel.

Billet what? Billet wood? billet steel? billet Aluminum? LOL :naughty:

Duane
 

figgie

Supramania Contributor
Mar 30, 2005
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T34418L3ONE said:
it doesnt add horsepower, it just lowers the amount lost through the drivetrain. Same with the aluminum driveshaft, the less weight the motor has to turn the more power is available to the wheels.

huh?

it does not lower HP. Heavier means more inertia to overcome. the same hp still flows through it 400hp = 400hp. The HP loss actually occurs in the transmission and differential.