Throwing parts at an issue with no proof they are going to fix a thing is going to amount to a series of expensive lessons. A noise like you have should be EASILY seen when the flywheel is pulled -IF- that's actually where the noise is from.Honestly…sounds like I need to just order a new flywheel. A used one on eBay would likely have the same issue. This sucks…already spent 500$ on parts going thru this motor. I’ve read about 10 posts and I’m sure it’s the flywheel. With no way to repair like other brands…it’s just going to get worse and ruin the coils and might cause major damage if it locks completely. Don’t really want to file down my coil pickups …already feel bad about trying that on one corner. Whole situation sucks…will have 1000$ in parts in a 25 year old motor and haven’t even touched the lower yet…
Hey mate I have just bought a motor with similar noise let me know what you have found I’m doing some investigation myself.I’ve already been under there and tried to lightly file the corner of the pickup…didn’t work. These pics are what I found before I did anything. It’s def a loud metallic pinging at flywheel speed…wouldn’t you say it’s hitting?
I think corrosion forms under the magnets and just pushes them out ever so slightly causing interference. The new flywheel number is a revision so I’m guessing they changed with material or process to address the corrosion issue. The tricky part was after 30-40 minutes it def did cause slight misfiring too. I see a lot of guys running them with the noise thinking it doesn’t hurt but it def will damage coils over time and cause heat/running issues. I searched “rubbing flywheel magnets rough running misfire” and couldn’t find any definitive case. Well here it is…. Thanks for all the help guys!Looks like you "solved" the problem, but I'm wondering what the actual difference is between the new and old flywheel? There wasn't anything loose in the old flywheel was there? Is there more clearance in the new flywheel? Slightly thinner magnets?
For other with noise issues, something here to consider. Maybe take a GOOD video (with high frame rate) and see if some analysis could lead to clues. Using one of the prior videos posted, I put it into a video editor and you could tell the "tick" was happening once per revolution, if that engine was running at around 750RPM when the video was done. If that video was done at 60FPS or faster, you could have more detail, and if the flywheel was marked you'd know exactly where the noise corresponded with the position of the flywheel.
Here's a graphic to try and illustrate the idea: