I was hoping some of you guys would care to share
their thoughts concerning aluminum vs. steel flywheels.
I have an aluminum one now (spec) in my fox & have
done my best with it at Keystone, but might steel be
better for drag racing?
I was hoping some of you guys would care to share
their thoughts concerning aluminum vs. steel flywheels.
I have an aluminum one now (spec) in my fox & have
done my best with it at Keystone, but might steel be
better for drag racing?
Lil' Blackie, also a Rodeheaver hot rod
Black Bess : n/a 347 T56 magnum,426 hp/ 427 tq
Best time at Keystone 11.68, best speed 122.95 mph (right lane)
Built, tuned & made possible by Tim Rodeheaver
Rodeheaver's Hot Rod Shop
15 W. Cross Ave.
Masontown Pa. 15461
724-737-5088
www.RodeheaversHotRod.com
I'd say it depends on your suspension. If you're launching off the limiter and still dead hooking then a switch to steel might be worth while to be able to leave harder. If not, then there's probably no need to switch. It's all about momentum. An aluminum flywheel at 6000 RPM will be similar to a steel flywheel at say 4500 RPM. I don't know what the exact difference is, but that's the basic idea.
2015 Charger Hellcat
2.4" upper pulley, ID1300 injectors, BAP, E85 tune, Cat Delete Pipes, One Piece Drive Shaft, Diff Brace, 305/35/20 555R's for the street and 305/45/18 MT ET Street R's for the track. 9.97@142 Best ET
85 GT
Heads and Cam plus other bolt ons
73 F250
Lifted, 35's, 460 4spd
Real name = Ray
I switched from a steel to lightweight aluminum in my 2000 GT. A lot of people said it would hurt my 60' time because of the lighter weight and less rotational mass momentum during the launch. But it didn't, my 60' stayed the same. I couldn't say if it helped on the top end because I did a few other mods at the same time. It definitely allowed the engine to rev quicker, no complaints here with the aluminum. I would stick with what you're running now.
03 Cobra 10th Anniversary
70 Nova SS
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