After spending all of last week in the UP, I decided to follow up on my experiment with the heavy slug weights mentioned in post #23 above. These weights were used in my Apex.
Rewind:
When I originally purchased this clutch in 2017, it came pre-calibrated with (11) 5.7 gram slugs, which added up to 62.7 grams of weight inside each puck. That wasn't enough, as the sled over-revved and the sheaves wouldn't fully shift out on top. In addition, there was a black smudge from the belt slipping at takeoff. I then added (3) more 5.7 gram slugs, which brought the total up to 79.8 grams of weight inside each puck. BINGO! This brought my revs down to 10,800 rpm, and the sled pulled hard. I rode an entire season this way, but my clutches were always HOT, and I still had a slight smudge down low at takeoff.
Fast forward:
Winter of 18-19, I installed the heavy slug weights pictured above, weighing 54.5 grams each. In addition, I adjusted the number of 5.7 gram slugs to closely match the total of 79.8 grams I used in each puck the previous year. Wow! The sheaves really grabbed the belt, so I rode the entire day this way. There was no belt smudge, but my overall performance was down due to my max revs only topping at 10,400 RPM'S. This didn't make sense to me, as I was running almost the exact same weight as before, at least within 1.5 grams. The other thing I noticed was that the sheaves were warm, not HOT. I don't have a temp gun, but I could tell the sheaves were noticeably cooler just by feeling them bare handed. Unfortunately, this was the only day I got to run my Apex that year...a whopping 150 miles...
Winter 19-20:
I took notes, so I started subtracting the individual 5.7 gram slugs from each puck until my revs came back up to 10,800. I'm now at (1) 54.5 & (2) 5.7 gram slugs, which brings the total weight inside each puck down to 65.9 grams. The sled just runs great, so I rode the entire day this way. I stopped several times, and upon inspection, there was no black smudge and the sheaves were warm, not HOT. Again, this doesn't make sense to me! Here my sled pulls hard, runs at the proper RPM, and does it with almost the exact same weigh per puck that it was shipped with, which wasn't even close! (scratching my head)
My uneducated conclusion:
The only thing that makes sense to me as to why this combination works so well, is WEIGHT PLACEMENT. The heavy 54.5 gram slug has a stepped shape. About half of its mass fits inside the hollow puck face, whereas the standard slugs do not. I'm speculating that moving weight into this void, farther from the center of rotation, allows the weight to come on sooner, all the way from engagement to full shift. I believe that's why the low end smudge disappeared and the reason for retaining top performance with less finish weight.
As mentioned early in this thread, I'm not a clutch expert. Call me silly or whatever, but these clutches work, and they're easy to tune. I truly believe the weight placement made all the difference in my sled
for the way I ride - trail!
Here are a few home drawn diagrams to display how both the standard and heavy weight turbo slugs are placed inside each puck. Again, refer to post #23 above for turbo slug pictures.
Cheers my friends!
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