04-18-2014, 12:45 PM
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#1
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2011
Location: Richmond, VA (The Fan)
Posts: 978
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Quote:
Originally Posted by healthservices
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Well played sir, well played
__________________
1997 Boxster 4.2L Audi V8 Bi-Turbo
2003 911 C2
NASA HPDE Instructor
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04-18-2014, 01:35 PM
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#2
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Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2013
Location: California
Posts: 466
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So what type of flywheel was on the batmobile? That is the way I'm going with my flywheel.
__________________
"Blind acceptance is a sign, of stupid fools who stand in line."
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04-18-2014, 04:00 PM
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#3
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Registered User
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Midwest
Posts: 1,746
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Quote:
Originally Posted by healthservices

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THAT made my night. Thanks.....
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04-18-2014, 04:05 PM
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#4
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Registered User
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Midwest
Posts: 1,746
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For the record..........I WAS going to go with a LWF but after researching it (beyond exploding motors, many guys had ongoing issues as a result of putting a LWF in) and coming to the conclusion it wouldn't be of any benefit to a street driven car I purchased a LUK Dual Mass unit off of Fleabay for significantly less than I could find anywhere else. I installed it along with a Sachs clutch kit in my 993 a couple of years ago, all is fine.
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04-18-2014, 12:39 PM
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#5
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Registered User
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: Canada
Posts: 3,151
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one person's 'luck' is another's 'caluclated risk'. folks have been taught to want black or white - it breaks or it doesn't. as soon as you get into 'it may break' you get conflict. people try to turn the grey into black or white. it 'may' break' turns into it 'won't' break or it 'will' break, and folks argue. 'i'm right' 'no i'm right'. you're both right. your both wrong. there are some that have broken, and some that have not. make a choice. try to base it on fact. ie, how may lw fw have broken vs how many are is use? ditto ims. ditto whatever. make your call based on risk vs reward - will a lw fw potentially fail sooner than a dual mass? perhaps. will it make driving more fun in the interim? perhaps. can you afford to deal with a failure if it happens? perhaps. ball it all up, make a decision and move on. all the feedback you get on the internet? worth what you paid for it. one failed flywheel with a sensational photo can morph into 'all lw flywheels fail' quite quickly out here in the ether. or a couple of success stories can send it the other direction (less frequently, however, as the interweb tends to attract the negative).
my personal story? i called the guys that made the dampened udps for gt3s and asked about an m96 application for use with lw fws and they told me that there was absolutely no need. i mean, is the oem flywheel dual mass in order to dampen harmonics, or is it heavier in order to allow use of a lighter unsprung clutch? it is a hairdressers car after all ...
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04-18-2014, 03:47 PM
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#6
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Registered User
Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: It's a kind of magic.....
Posts: 6,649
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Quote:
Originally Posted by The Radium King
one person's 'luck' is another's 'caluclated risk'. folks have been taught to want black or white - it breaks or it doesn't. as soon as you get into 'it may break' you get conflict. people try to turn the grey into black or white. it 'may' break' turns into it 'won't' break or it 'will' break, and folks argue. 'i'm right' 'no i'm right'. you're both right. your both wrong. there are some that have broken, and some that have not. make a choice. try to base it on fact. ie, how may lw fw have broken vs how many are is use? ditto ims. ditto whatever. make your call based on risk vs reward - will a lw fw potentially fail sooner than a dual mass? perhaps. will it make driving more fun in the interim? perhaps. can you afford to deal with a failure if it happens? perhaps. ball it all up, make a decision and move on. all the feedback you get on the internet? worth what you paid for it. one failed flywheel with a sensational photo can morph into 'all lw flywheels fail' quite quickly out here in the ether. or a couple of success stories can send it the other direction (less frequently, however, as the interweb tends to attract the negative).
my personal story? i called the guys that made the dampened udps for gt3s and asked about an m96 application for use with lw fws and they told me that there was absolutely no need. i mean, is the oem flywheel dual mass in order to dampen harmonics, or is it heavier in order to allow use of a lighter unsprung clutch? it is a hairdressers car after all ...
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"Luck" also plays into it in a way very few even think about. By Porsche standards, the M96/97 engines are mass production items, and tend to have "broader" tolerances is several areas, including how well they are internally harmonically balanced. Unlike the Mezger lump that used to be used in the Turbo cars and is still in production in the cup cars, and which are refined to a very high standard, the M96/97's are not as closely held to the ideal specs. That is one of the many reasons the Metzger will set you back $50+K for a replacement, while an M96 is in the $15K range. Net result is that some M96/97's naturally produce more rotating assembly harmonics than others. And if "luck" has it that yours is one of the high harmonics engines, pulling the dual mass creates a lot more stress on the assembly. Plus, if your "luck" is really bad, and you get one of the lightweight units that is 10 or more grams out of balance on its own, it can become a recipe for a disaster.
When M96's are torn down and sent out to be internally balanced, some are pretty good, others not so much and require a lot more time in the machine shop to get them where they need to be. And it is a totally a matter of "luck" which one it will be......
__________________
“Anything really new is invented only in one’s youth. Later, one becomes more experienced, more famous – and more stupid.” - Albert Einstein
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04-18-2014, 04:15 PM
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#7
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Registered User
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Midwest
Posts: 1,746
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Lastly, I forgot to mention that if you do indeed test your DMF for in spec deflection and it passes with flying colors like mine did with ~35k miles on it (while I did the IMS bearing upgrade in my Box), you can simply clean it up with a palm sander since it cannot be resurfaced.
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04-18-2014, 09:35 PM
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#8
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Registered Boxster abuser
Join Date: Oct 2011
Location: socal
Posts: 1,014
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Dual mass actually can be resurfaced but the surface where the friction material touches must be clamped down in a fixture so it will not move. Here in OC there a couple guys who will do it, but shop around. the prices I found were as high as $450 and a low as $75.
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