Balancing Crank Questions
I'm a Mechanical engineer with experience with rotating machines and vibration. The machines I work with are fixed speed typically but I've done some XP work as well.
I started a thread on it last year over at doo talk.
http://www.dootalk.com/forums/index.php?showtopic=430850&st=45
I've read all the Perks related posts on Snow West and watched his Youtube vids.
I need some help understanding the Perks method of running the engine to balance vs. spinning with an electric motor.
This doesn't make sense to me that live operation testing with the forcing frequency of the pistons firing should influence the vibration readings differently than the electric motor driver. Engine firing really confused my vibration analyzer and I gave up on dynamically balancing the running XP. I couldn't keep a steady RPM as well as it changed during the data sampling. I was able to balance my clutch with steady speed AC motor chucked on a custom shaft.
My XP took 1/4 oz of weight by the way.
The other major question I can't understand is the vibration kit where Joe balances the clutch then you strap on a mag plate at some known phase angle even though no testing has been done on the machine to know where that phase angle is. Please explain or elaborate? The only thing that comes to mind is that every XP out there has the same missing mass at the same phase angle which to me seems very unlikely. These are cast components assembled up.
Finally from everything I've read and seen with the videos it doesn't seem to me that Joe @ Perks can explain the theory perfectly because I've seen these questions posted before from WinterBrew and TreeThasher. I don't think these questions are trade secrets.
I'm not denying the merits to balanced XP rotating components but there's something I can't quite grasp.
Also here's a fresh question, with a crank/clutch truly balanced how far of a runout can we go to not have a detrimental effect on the bearings.
For instance if BRP says 0.0024" runout max and clutches are balanced to 1/4 oz. Could we think that 0.005 runout is exceptable with 1/64 oz? Aren't the bearing clearances like 0.005" runout on the Koyo's?
HANDS DOWN, best thread i've read in a while. Good stuff..