Flywheel lightening
I got two flywheels from a Fiat friend as mentioned earlier in the thread. The deal was I could keep one if I returned his to him lightened. So lets start with a stock weight:
This old kitchen scale looks crusty, but the weight it registers is about the same as what the internet told me the stock flywheel should weigh. 16 lbs, 2 oz.
Next to chuck it up on the lathe. I restored this old ~1944 Logan lathe a few years ago, and it's one hell of a machine for a hobbyist like me. You can see I started with my three jaw chuck in this photo:
Clearance was super tight - this is definitely the largest flywheel I'll ever turn on this ~11" lathe. Another 1/8" and I would have been paying to have this work done.
First thing I noticed is the large amount of runout I was seeing. The flywheel visibly wobbled radially when I ran the lathe. After a shifting it on the chuck a few times, I realized I needed to switch to my four jaw chuck to get the accuracy I needed. This flywheel will spin to almost 8k RPM on the engine, so accuracy is probably important. The jaws on a three jaw chuck all turn together when you tighten them up. They're ok for accuracy but you get what you pay for. Mine is old and kind of cheap and apparently not accurate when tightened on the ID of a flywheel clutch disc surface. Four jaw chucks have each jaw tightened independently, so you have to use the jaws to manually center the work using a dial indicator. With the four jaw, I was able to get it zeroed to the pilot bushing hole in the center of the flywheel down to .005mm. I'm not a machinist, but I feel like I got this as accurate as I possibly could with my equipment.
The manufacturing tolerances on these flywheels surprised me - they were out of round from the factory by about .050". I really was torn between zeroing the flywheel to the outer edge, or the center hole where the flywheel seats on the crank snout. Since they will still need to be balanced before use, I opted to use the center hole since in my mind it is better to be concentric to the crank than some arbitrary cut made in Italy 40 years ago. I really hope this was the right choice. If they come back from the balancer with issues, then I'll recut the backs concentric to the outside instead of the crank I guess.
First few passes made:
Turning this cast iron was a bear. It required the upper limits of torque the lathe could produce, and the tooling absolutely screamed wet or dry. I played with some different cutting tools, feed speeds, depth of cut, and eventually found it cut best as slowly as possible. Back gear on the lathe, and slooooow cuts with a small carbide insert. It would cut pretty deep passes if it weren't for the fact I was operating at the max power on the machine and I could still stop it cold if I tried to take too much. Here's a before and after of the two flywheels:
There was plenty of meat to remove from the flywheel without coming anywhere close to creating any structural issues. On the engine side of the flywheel is where all the cuts were made, and these things had a very broad sweep of iron getting progressively thicker the further out toward the starter ring you went. This iron was there to support the ring and to add weight. The starter rings needs to be supported, but could do with far less meat. I kept the removal pretty conservative overall - I've read about people taking stock flywheels down to 12 pounds, but I can only assume that would require some drastic measures. Catastrophic flywheel failure is not something I want to explore.
Here are the two finished flywheels:
Additional work included lots of cleanup. They were both rusty and gross from years of use, so I gave them an extensive scotchbrite pad treatment. One of the flywheels had a few starter teeth that needed a little love with a file to clean up some burrs. I also chased the threads on all the holes with a tap to ensure they were clean. This was a much needed step - the threads were gross on both flywheels. I gave the clutch disc surface a fresh surface too - one had been recently resurfaced and didn't need anything but some gunk removed from it.
Final weight: 14lbs 1oz.