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Thread: Solid Crank Pulley ....

  1. #1
    discotuner is offline AULRO Holiday Reward Points Winner!
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    Solid Crank Pulley ....

    Hello,
    Saw this on the net last night, did a bit of research about them could find much negativity on them, there seem to be a lot made for racing and drag racing is this because they have balanced motors ??? can you fit on instead of the Harmonic Balancer on a normal TD5, I see these guys just did that..

    www.youtube.com/watch?v=YyVnVGmn64k

    Looking at my auto I have a solid flywheel, and then a Ashcroft Medium TC bolted to that, why would a solid pulley on the front do any damage the crank ?

    Iain

  2. #2
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    I see no reason why not. I do question why.

    I have a few motors that have harmonic balancers. You do realise, to balance them with the crank, you will have to strip the motor and send the components off to be balanced?

    if you want a smoother running motor putting out an extra kw or two after you have rebuilt it, sure, why not. It only costs a little extra in the total rebuild costs.

  3. #3
    Tombie Guest
    I'd never run a solid on a Diesel...

    I'd never run a single mass flywheel on a modern diesel either...

  4. #4
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    Quote Originally Posted by Tombie View Post
    I'd never run a solid on a Diesel...

    I'd never run a single mass flywheel on a modern diesel either...
    Why not?
    I just have one diesel. It has a solid mass harmonic balancer and a sizable one at that.
    Or is the harmonic balancer on a 4BD1T so light it is just a pulley?
    I am rather new to this diesel thing.

  5. #5
    Tombie Guest
    Quote Originally Posted by Mick_Marsh View Post
    Why not?
    I just have one diesel. It has a solid mass harmonic balancer and a sizable one at that.
    Or is the harmonic balancer on a 4BD1T so light it is just a pulley?
    I am rather new to this diesel thing.
    Seen what the 4BD1 does to gearboxes etc from the engine pulses?

  6. #6
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    I'm not mechanically minded enough to give an explanation but using only logic i would'nt put such stress on the ''powertrain" like a solid crankshaft damper or flywheel, especially flywheel... i made the mistake to take a smart mechanics advice once and let him fit a solid flywheel on my D2 then removed it in less than 3 weeks cos i couldn bear the vibration and noise at high speeds, maybe it works for those who are using the D2 mostly off road but for motorway or normal road driving it's a disaster

    afaik the crank pulley is more than a "harmonic balancer" cos it's officialy named "torsional vibration damper" which might be something else(or not?)

    about the DMF, it's enough for me to read what's doing to understand why not solid, i wish i knew that before that unpleasant experience
    The dual mass flywheel is used to insulate the gearbox from torsional and transient vibrations produced by the engine.
    The flywheel comprises primary and secondary flywheels with the drive between the two transferred by a torsional
    damper which comprises four coil springs.
    ....
    Under high torque loading conditions the secondary flywheel can
    rotate in either direction up to 70 degrees in relation to the primary flywheel. !!!
    i hope this helps
    Discovery Td5 (2000), manual, tuned

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    Quote Originally Posted by Tombie View Post
    Seen what the 4BD1 does to gearboxes etc from the engine pulses?
    Nup.
    Wouldn't a balanced harmonic balancer help prevent engine pulses? I'm sure it would for a petrol engine. What is different for a diesel?
    I've not heard the term "`engine pulses" before. Is it a diesel thing?

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    Quote Originally Posted by Mick_Marsh View Post
    Nup.
    Wouldn't a balanced harmonic balancer help prevent engine pulses? I'm sure it would for a petrol engine. What is different for a diesel?
    I've not heard the term "`engine pulses" before. Is it a diesel thing?
    Not really, but more evident in a diesel.
    It describes how the power comes from the engine, less smooth like an electric drill, more in spikes or pulses like an impact driver or rattle gun.

    The purpose of these dual mass harmonic balancers and flywheels is to absorb or smooth out that hammer effect so your gearbox, transfer case, diffs, alternator, water pump etc etc do not.

    Sent from my GT-S7562L using AULRO mobile app

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    Quote Originally Posted by SSmith View Post
    Not really, but more evident in a diesel.
    It describes how the power comes from the engine, less smooth like an electric drill, more in spikes or pulses like an impact driver or rattle gun.

    The purpose of these dual mass harmonic balancers and flywheels is to absorb or smooth out that hammer effect so your gearbox, transfer case, diffs, alternator, water pump etc etc do not.

    Sent from my GT-S7562L using AULRO mobile app
    Ta.
    That explains why the harmonic balancers on my other vehicles have a rubber component in them.
    I also take it the diesel has more of a hammer effect, which seems more obvious now.

  10. #10
    Tombie Guest
    Quote Originally Posted by Mick_Marsh View Post
    Ta.
    That explains why the harmonic balancers on my other vehicles have a rubber component in them.
    I also take it the diesel has more of a hammer effect, which seems more obvious now.
    And the less cylinders usually the worse it is....

    4 large pulses vs 8 smaller ones per rotation

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