<VV> Re: [FC] [VV] Harmonic balancers....
corvairs
lonwall at corvairunderground.com
Sat Jun 30 13:56:24 EDT 2007
All rotating shafts set up harmonic distortion - The distortion has peak
points where damage is accumulated. The reason the early Corvairs do not
need it is because the harmonic distortion points are not reached in
normal rotation (Let's just say, for example, the first peak distortion
point would be 6,000 rpms - obviously not an issue).
When the engine was stroked in 1964, a number of factors lowered the
peak point(s) into normal operating range. Not just the additional throw
itself (because then why would the same cu 95hp engine not need a
balancer?) but also changes in the force due to the increased horsepower.
It seems possible that if you made substantial hp modifications to an
early 145 cu motor that you might end up with distortion issues under
normal rpms - but that has never been researched or proven. Putting a
balancer on an early motor won't hurt anything, but costs extra money
and could be a maintainance problem down the road (unless it's a dale
balancer of course).
The argument is that GM and everone else putting these much more
expensive balancers on millions of engines would not have done it if it
wasn't necessary. Sometimes modern technology can prove that such
things were unnecessary. But that doesn't seem the case here. It's
pretty hard to get away from real physical properties of rotating
shafts. If anything, someone may develop a much cheaper, easier way to
mitigate the problem. But, for Corvairs at least, that hasn't happened.
Lon
www.corvairunderground.com
Rick Loving wrote:
>Has any thought been applied to using or not using HB on larger than
>164cu motors?
>
>Was it the longer throw of the stroked motor that required the HB?
>
>If you stroke a 164 motor, will the stock HB still function? Would the
>harmonic's and damping effects still cancel themselves out?
>
>Rick Loving
><SNIP>
>
>
>Subject: <VV> Re: [FC] [VV] Harmonic balancers....
>
>
>In a message dated 6/29/2007 7:49:57 PM US Mountain Standard Time,
>noahsarkinc at earthlink.net writes:
>
>If it isn't broke, then why mess with it. The balancers were
>neccessary
>when GM went to the larger displacement engines to smooth out
>vibrations. If
>you don't have a problem, why spend the money? Paul in CT
>
>
>
>Paul,
>With all respect, I must disagree with you here. The Harmonic Dampers
>are
>there to dampen the torsional vibrations caused by the power stroke
>impulses
>twisting the crankshaft and causing oscillations of the crank. They
>are really
>not balancers but are dampers. These dampers were necessary on all 164
>CID
>engines. The problem is that running without a HD causes minute cracks
>to
>develop in the crank, and then grow each time undamped oscillations
>occur. These
>cracks expand and grow for each occurance of the undamped oscillations,
>until
>one day the crankshaft just breaks in two. By then it's too late to
>fix the
>problem. So while you might think there is no problem prior to a crank
>breaking, you will know for sure you have a problem after it does. My
>recommendation is to always run a HD on a 164 CID engine....ALWAYS.
>Regards,
>Bob Helt
>_____
>
>
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