Lightweight flywheel
#1
Pro
Thread Starter
Lightweight flywheel
So my car is mainly a HPDE car now but I do take it out once in awhile. I'm looking at getting a LS7 clutch and maybe a lightweight flywheel to go with it. The car is mostly stock just has headers, tune and I plan on keeping it this way. So I think the clutch will be ok. I just need some ideas on flywheels. What are you guys using and where is the best place to pick one up at?
#2
Le Mans Master
LS7 is the last clutch I would ever put in a car that sees track duty. It's one of the heaviest clutches you can put in a C5 and heavy clutches are murder on other drivetrain components.
I have 2 Spec clutches that I need to sell. One is a stage 1 and one is a stage 3. Both have aluminum flywheel and optional aluminum pressure plate. Not that I'm trying to sell it to you, unless you want to buy one of course. Just saying that there are much better options than an LS7 clutch.
I have 2 Spec clutches that I need to sell. One is a stage 1 and one is a stage 3. Both have aluminum flywheel and optional aluminum pressure plate. Not that I'm trying to sell it to you, unless you want to buy one of course. Just saying that there are much better options than an LS7 clutch.
#3
Safety Car
It put a Fidanza flywheel and clutch in my car a couple of years back. Haven't touched it since.
The aluminum flywheel was the single biggest performance gain I've seen at the track. The engine just winds up like crazy. Biggest problem I had was changing all of my shift points on the track. It wound up so fast I had to shift a lot sooner than I did with the stock flywheel.
Richard Newton
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The aluminum flywheel was the single biggest performance gain I've seen at the track. The engine just winds up like crazy. Biggest problem I had was changing all of my shift points on the track. It wound up so fast I had to shift a lot sooner than I did with the stock flywheel.
Richard Newton
#4
Le Mans Master
Member Since: Dec 2006
Location: Phoenix Arizona
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LS7 is the last clutch I would ever put in a car that sees track duty. It's one of the heaviest clutches you can put in a C5 and heavy clutches are murder on other drivetrain components.
I have 2 Spec clutches that I need to sell. One is a stage 1 and one is a stage 3. Both have aluminum flywheel and optional aluminum pressure plate. Not that I'm trying to sell it to you, unless you want to buy one of course. Just saying that there are much better options than an LS7 clutch.
I have 2 Spec clutches that I need to sell. One is a stage 1 and one is a stage 3. Both have aluminum flywheel and optional aluminum pressure plate. Not that I'm trying to sell it to you, unless you want to buy one of course. Just saying that there are much better options than an LS7 clutch.
google "sac clutch"...
#6
Drifting
Spec flywheel and clutch on C5 track only car. No issues since install about 7 months ago. Makes getting on the trailer a little more difficult but makes the track much more fun.
#7
So my car is mainly a HPDE car now but I do take it out once in awhile. I'm looking at getting a LS7 clutch and maybe a lightweight flywheel to go with it. The car is mostly stock just has headers, tune and I plan on keeping it this way. So I think the clutch will be ok. I just need some ideas on flywheels. What are you guys using and where is the best place to pick one up at?
Use TmillerC5 as username in your serach.
I have yet to do any trackdays yet, but it feels fine to me. My car is a street car that does up to 5 hpde weekends a year, so that was also a factor for me.
#8
Le Mans Master
It put a Fidanza flywheel and clutch in my car a couple of years back. Haven't touched it since.
The aluminum flywheel was the single biggest performance gain I've seen at the track. The engine just winds up like crazy. Biggest problem I had was changing all of my shift points on the track. It wound up so fast I had to shift a lot sooner than I did with the stock flywheel.
Richard Newton
Facebook
The aluminum flywheel was the single biggest performance gain I've seen at the track. The engine just winds up like crazy. Biggest problem I had was changing all of my shift points on the track. It wound up so fast I had to shift a lot sooner than I did with the stock flywheel.
Richard Newton
2nd that with the BIGGEST HELL YEAH. Out of all my mods, this was my favorite. As said motor revs like crazy (Ferrari like) and blipping the throttle for rev matching is pure joy. I can't justify the cost right now as my current clutch is in good shape, but the minute it goes, Fidanza flywheel is going in!!!
#9
Drifting
I did exactly what you are wanting to do. LS7 clutch with a Fidanza light weight flywheel 13# unit. Only got to 3 track days last year and I really like it. Seemed to have more pop out of the corners and I was shifting a little earlier as it ramped up pretty quik. Street driving was not bad either. I would get a little bucking at real slow speeds but nothing that would drive you crazy unless you get stuck in traffic.
Like you I still like driving on the street but paln on doing 4/5 track days this year. A couple at Road America and then a couple shorter tracks around the Mid West. I have been real happy with the combo and have had no problems with it.
Tim
Like you I still like driving on the street but paln on doing 4/5 track days this year. A couple at Road America and then a couple shorter tracks around the Mid West. I have been real happy with the combo and have had no problems with it.
Tim
#10
Safety Car
I've got the aluminum Fidanza as well as their lightweight 7.6 dual disk clutch. The only view of the street my car gets is from on the trailer on the way to the track. Even as lightweight as my system is, it's still very easy to modulate the clutch. If there's a downside it would be that with a large cam the motor has a little trouble coming back to idle without hunting. Nothing I can't live with on a track car. As far as track performance - it's the only way to go.