Needs to be check so that he clutch engages smoothly. It being out of spec. is caused by excessive heat from a slipping clutch.
Most single cylinder engines will not run with out a flywheel. Once you have a flywheel large enough to allow the engine to start and run then increasing the size and mass will help smooth the operation.
On the back of the engine, mounted between the engine and transmission, inside the bell housing. You cannot see the flywheel. The starter is connected to the flywheel when you start the engine.On the back of the engine, mounted between the engine and transmission, inside the bell housing. You cannot see the flywheel. The starter is connected to the flywheel when you start the engine.
you have to remove the flywheel, take engine cover off, remove flywheel, its under it, next to the points, you have to remove the flywheel, take engine cover off, remove flywheel, its under it, next to the points, you have to remove the flywheel, take engine cover off, remove flywheel, its under it, next to the points, you have to remove the flywheel, take engine cover off, remove flywheel, its under it, next to the points,
will 4.6 windsor engine with 6 bolt flywheel interchange with 8 bolt flywheel
No, a rusted flywheel will not cause the engine not to turn over.
In most cases the flywheel is bolted straight on to the end of the crankshaft.
A bad flywheel can definitely cause the engine not to turn over. The flywheel has teeth. If the teeth are chipped or broken, then the starter can not engage to spin the engine over.
A flywheel is (usually) a heavy, solid chunk of spinning metal that is used to store rotational energy. Combustion engines have them to make them run smoother at low revs. W/o a flywheel the power from the engine would be delivered in sharp pulses, making for a jerky ride and maybe stalling the engine. For a bicycle you don't want the added weight of the flywheel, and the human as engine does a good job of smoothing out the power anyhow. If you insist on pushing the comparison you can perhaps claim that the wheels on the bicycle will act as flywheels when the bike is at speed.
no
take the tranny out and the flywheel is right on back of the engine, unbolt the flywheel and take it off and install new flywheel with new bolts and torque them down.
No. It positions the flywheel in the proper place for the ignition timing.
Crankshaft directly connects to the flywheel.