Mentioning the balance factor is fine - but I want to see the bob weight - not just the balance factor. I want the bob weights of stock Commando cranks. We already know what the balance factor is for those. And I don't want it from a manual. I want the actual measured bob weighs to verify these balance factors.The bob weight has to be for a balance factor - i.e. a percentage of the partial mass of the conrod
Here is Cycle World's recent video on Balance Kevin C and Mark H who raced and owns Commandos.
Isn't that what the shop manual tells you with "23.55oz. (667.6 grams) on each journal" For a factory balance job?Mentioning the balance factor is fine - but I want to see the bob weight - not just the balance factor. I want the bob weights of stock Commando cranks. We already know what the balance factor is for those. And I don't want it from a manual. I want the actual measured bob weighs to verify these balance factors.
I'm measuring 638 grams (not 667) for the 850 at 52% wet. Maybe close enough but looking for an average.My balancer says his balancer spins up freely and quicker when he does things to make the crank better. He/we also discovered a few things that surprised me with stock cranks.
Isn't that what the shop manual tells you with "23.55oz. (667.6 grams) on each journal" For a factory balance job?
This is pair of test wts I had made, the Hooters girl also has a nice balanced pair, too
No, no, no, no, no. There is no "imbalance at high revs," again: it's balanced by the entire drive assembly acting partially in place of a crank counterweight by its freedom to move within the main frame. This is not rocket science. It's obvious. There is no "lower performance," and there would be no gains by increasing the balance factor IN A COMMANDO ISOLASTIC FRAME. Vibration energy does not go down a chain, and in a Commando frame, the chain is going up and down with the engine and is part of the effective crank counterweight to a small degree.The low balance factor in the Commando motor has to lower performance. It might not vibrate, but the energy due to the imbalance at high revs has to go somewhere, if it does not go down the chain.
Disc brake? Drum?With my 850 motor, the balance factor is 72%. It is dead smooth at 7300RPM. I have never tempted fate by revving it higher, and it does not need to go higher - it is fast enough - and that surprises me. It is the most responsive motorcycle I have ever ridden. Using the torque is tricky. It was hopeless with normal ratio gears, and jetting is critical.
I think guys who speculate when they race, probably do better. I would never buy a 6 speed close box on spec. - but some guys would. If I'd had the TTI box the last time I raced, I would have scared the shit out of 20 guys. I don't think I will ever get to use it.