Thanks Gold Guy! I was just gonna' start searching... I have been trying to gather up a bunch of posts and put together a folder for myself so if /when someone needed something I could find it. Now I have a bunch of info that is need of a catalog system of some sort... and I'm still not through all the 500 posts...and every time I start going through them I find more nuggets I missed the first time....
The only flywheel weights I remember seeing Somewhat unconventional were the thread in the 500 engine mod with the Mitch Payton cylinder that Don Found from the Jeff Ward Bike.
I'm sure Danger would love to hear any suggestions on improving the site. I am really just a member who has random blocks of time to search the web account I have so little money to actually DO anything, and with my skeleton melting with arthritis It's harder and harder to even get up in the morning
Now back to your question! Here's an artical copied from MXA :
http://www.thumperfaq.com/mxa_flywheel.htmAnd one from A great auto rescource:
http://victorylibrary.com/tech/inertia-c.htm Tuck\o/
This member explains his steahly on a 250:
http://www.kxriders.com/forums/index.php/topic,3154.0.html And a tidbit from the Books of BDI :
"Another option is to change your aluminum clutch plates out for steel ones. I'm Just assuming your bike has aluminum clutch plates. If they are you can add 65% more weight over the aluminum plates."
And Danger :
"I have a flywheel weight and my experience is no power loss. The extra weight on the flywheel stops the rpm from spinning up so fast. There is a point at low rpm, so low the weight of the stock flywheel can't push the piston over top dead center because of the gasoline combustion.
You know, killing the engine and it jerks to a stop and almost puts you over the bars? With the extra mass of a flywheel weight the flywheel can push past top dead center at lower rpm's."