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holty wrote:ive used lightened flywheels for years, a worthwhile upgrade, probably aimed more at at tuned engine, gives better acceleration through the gears and makes the engine more responsive, a good side effect is the reduction in weight puts less strain on the crankshaft, downside is the tick over has to be raised slightly as the lack of inertia makes the engine want to stall at very low speeds, but overall a good upgrade.
Norrie Bodge wrote:I've gotta Ducati flywheel sat on shelf !
Just wondering weather I'll get any further benefit by fitting it ?
Replacing the mid-weight flywheel currently fitted on my GP???
It's running a LTH Reed manifold with 30phbh & JL3
Fast n Furious wrote:...................A battery DC supplied CDI makes a good powerful spark right through the rev range. This help enormously with low inertia tickover and resists 2 stroke plug fouling. It also overcomes reliance on the shitty LT stator coils.
rossclark wrote:The original AF Ducati flywheel had very little clearance and sometimes rubbed on the pickup.
The later AFR flywheels are supposed to have addressed this problem, but I've had rubbing on one of these so it pays to check carefully.
coaster wrote:Fast n Furious wrote:...................A battery DC supplied CDI makes a good powerful spark right through the rev range. This help enormously with low inertia tickover and resists 2 stroke plug fouling. It also overcomes reliance on the shitty LT stator coils.
I suspect the reason this isn't adopted on a Lambretta will be down to the current draw on the battery. I have no figures but do know that many years ago when the dynamo on my mini packed up I had a flat battery within 20 miles or soI daresay it would be fine for open road use but slow town riding might soon flatten the battery
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