The other day saw this guy talking in a tuning event and he was quite clear about flywheels

(at least it made sense to me).

There are applications you need lighter flywheels and there are others where you may need heavier ones.

For off-roading, you don't want the engine to rev up and down fast.

You want a engine that keeps its momentum on a constant rate so you can modulate traction easier.

For track, you want the engine response to be has immediate as possible.

So light flywheels.

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It won't have any more or less torque/power.

It's only when changing momentum

(accelerating or decelerating) that you'll see the difference with the engine reacting faster because the rotating mass is smaller.

Imagine that you have to rotate a wheel using pedals

(like in a bicycle).

You're body produces a amount of torque that doesn't change

(at least in a 10 minutes gap).

You can only rotate the wheel until a certain RPM because you'll lose your coordination

(red line!

).

If the

wheel is very light you'll make it spin really quickly and stop it in a short amount of time.

If the wheel is very heavy it will be the opposite.

However, you'll probably achieve the same RPM and you're producing the same power.

Sorry for the long thread.

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Cheers,
Vítor