GregLocock,
"Slight disagreement there. Typically the inertia of a elastomeric HD is insufficient to move the mode very far, certainly not out of the operating range for a race engine. Last time I worked on one the engine guys were rather insistent that I tune it for reducing the maximum TV in the entire rev range, rather than what I wanted, more effect lower down."
I might disagree with you, but my knowledge of crankshaft torsional dynamics is pretty limited. However, I don't believe it is normally possible to reduce the maximum amplitude of a given structure's modal response to an excitation force over a wide range of frequencies as your engine guys requested. A complex dynamic system like an engine's crank train has lots of structural modes whose orders and magnitudes are the result of a wide range of excitation forces. The reason torsional dampeners are used is to minimize the additional stresses imposed on the crankshaft structure due to the structure's natural modal response. The crankshaft system has many natural frequency modes of various orders. The best result one can usually hope for when designing a torsional dampener is to alter the system's lower order (ie. usually the most energetic ones) structural modes enough so that they do not couple with the excitation frequencies produced by the engine's firing order throughout its normal operational range. They can be shifted, but not eliminated.
In short, the elastomeric dampener is a TV "tuning" device and not so much a "dampening" device. In order to be an effective dampener, the elastomer element would need to be capable of absorbing (through hysteresis)and dissipating a significant amount of energy solely through conduction. Most of the elastomeric dampeners I've seen have the thin elastomeric element thermally isolated between two metallic rings (the inner hub and the outer inertia ring). And that elastomer usually has a pretty low temperature capability. So it would quickly fail thermally if it had to dissipate any significant amount of energy.
I mostly agree with your statements about how much torsional deflections a crankshaft can endure. It's a function of material fatigue capability, Kt's, degree of load reversals, and torsional stiffness characteristics of the structure. A long, 6 pin V12 crank will naturally have more torsional deflection end-to-end than an in-line 4 crank, right? As for that article you linked, I quit reading it after the author claimed that his dampener both absorbed less power and also provided greater dampening. I don't believe the two results are mutually compatible; greater dampening would also imply greater energy absorption.
Best regards,
Terry