Re: Lightning the flywheel worth it?
It's designed to be as light as possible and then it is balanced.
I can't say I agree with that. There are benefits to having a heavy flywheel. Flywheels store energy, and the heavier your flywheel the more energy it can store. Only racing flywheels, where an engine is at constant high rpm, and the vehicle almost never stops. Stored energy is not a concern, so they have lighter flywheels to allow the engines to spin up faster. But heavier flywheels help an engine maintain torque. And this is especially true when there is a tremendous load on an engine. (such as a marine engine). At low speeds, the engine will have a hard time idling, and therefore will need a higher idle speed. Which also means your going to have a faster boat speed. Which you don't always want especially when you are navigating channels or marinas. Or trying to back up 300 feet in a straight line in the wind and current. Conversely, if you are at cruise rpms, having a heavy flywheel will help keep the engine from bogging down when the boat travels over waves. And another way of saying that is it will help maintain both torque and RPM through a rapidly changing rpm.
Heavy flywheels have benefits. Especially on high load engines.