flywheel weight
flywheel weight
(OP)
hi all,a question from a newbie
i was recently given a dozer for my hobby farm but the dozer needs an engine,it was a komatsu d120 engine that revs to 1200,solid mount with a balance shaft arrangement.the engine i intend to fit is a similar horsepower ford/lehman 6 cyl diesel that revs to about 2200.
anyway to make the clutch assembly work i have to join flywheels,as the komatsu flywheel takes a wet disc clutch plate.so if i add approx 30 kg to the ford/lehman diesel flywheel will it work or simply cause problems with rear bearings,seals and or crank,
thanks in advance
great forums.
i was recently given a dozer for my hobby farm but the dozer needs an engine,it was a komatsu d120 engine that revs to 1200,solid mount with a balance shaft arrangement.the engine i intend to fit is a similar horsepower ford/lehman 6 cyl diesel that revs to about 2200.
anyway to make the clutch assembly work i have to join flywheels,as the komatsu flywheel takes a wet disc clutch plate.so if i add approx 30 kg to the ford/lehman diesel flywheel will it work or simply cause problems with rear bearings,seals and or crank,
thanks in advance
great forums.





RE: flywheel weight
RE: flywheel weight
because the komatsu engine had a balance shaft arrangement running off the crank it ran very smoothly and was solid mounted,so with the lehman diesel should i fit rubber type mounts or simply mount it directly to the chassis as the komatsu was? it may run rougher,but it will be hard to tell until its in and running.
thanks
RE: flywheel weight
RE: flywheel weight
If the 6 cylinder is an in-line, it should have excellent dynamic balance. Probably better than the in-line 4 with balance shafts. So if you did not need elastomeric mounts with the 4 cylinder, you shouldn't need them with the in-line 6.
The 6 cylinder should also have smoother torque delivery than the 4 cylinder, since there will be less torque ripple with a cylinder firing every 120 degrees on the 6 cylinder versus only every 180 degrees on the 4 cylinder.
The aft main bearing won't even notice an extra 66 lbs of overhung flywheel mass.
Just make sure the max torque output of your new engine doesn't overload the existing gear train.
Good luck.
Terry
RE: flywheel weight
i even considered putting a closed loop hyd drive in but ive no idea what torque would be required to drive a 4 speed 14 t dozer trans,it only has a small resovoir and may heat up quickly.then i would have to rig a cooler up etc etc.
i have a collection of hyd valves and commercial pumps but the formulae has me scratching my head at times.
RE: flywheel weight
clutches..ive changed a few and understand how they work etc etc but am wondering about sizes needed and type of.
as i was going to change flywheels in the dozer and make a conversion plate to fit the original komatsu twin plate wet clutch that was hydraulically cooled and operated to fit the ford lehman diesel,well anyway ive run into trouble and am now wondering if i can fit a dry type,plate,pressure plate,throwout bearing type as in say a v8 truck.
how do i figure size needed etc
as it was
a wet twin plate powered and cooled on the back of a d120 slow reving[1200 rpm tops] diesel driving a 4 speed trans to move and push with a 14 tonne dozer
what im considering
an 8 yard v8 international dry type clutch
bolted to the ford lehman diesel,rig up a foot type pedal and make the old g'box input shaft into a driveshaft with a centre bearing[approx 600 mm length] to power the dozers gear box input shaft.
so am i dreaming
or is it possible
RE: flywheel weight
ISZ
RE: flywheel weight
as its an old dozer,built around the mid 1960 s it would mainly be used sparingly on my small acreage in 1 st gear forward and reverse,pushing a little bush and towing logs at times.i guess that when its running along in first gear,there would be minimal load on the clutch,but perhaps taking off in second or third may generate heat?