I have a lightweight flywheel, underdrive pulley, and electric fans and my car drops to idle rpm fine from high revs (4000+ down to 850).480sx wrote:I read a little piece of information the other day that was saying that a stalling issue can be caused by a reduced amount of rotational mass on the drivetrain. I have a stalling issue and its manageable, but its still damned annoying when the car doesnt want to idle down from revs.
So my question is.. To those of you who have a lightened flywheel, do you have issues when your car is idling down from rev's? If not, did you do anything to fix it, or was there never a problem at all?
stage 2 clutch is okay whoever told you that cant handle the clutch. i drove my bros 97 prelude w/ clutch master stage 2 and it ran fine. also driven my buddy's skyline gts-t stage 3 clutch and its fine. you dont have to revv it higher in order to shift. plus if u turbo a ka, the stock clutch will start slippin and that will cause even more wear right. Make sense to u?1mansho wrote:I was also in the market to get a flywheel before i installed my exedy stage 2. I just heard that if you daily your car, you put more stress on your clutch and wear it out faster cause you have to rev higher everywhere you go. I stuck with my stock one and man im glad i didnt get light flywheel, id be stalling all the time cause the clutch grabs really hard. I'd advise you to stick to stock if you worry about drivability.
Yeah, I'm going to agree with this. I have a tuned ECU and I see fuel come back around a hair under 1K, but I idle around high 800 or low 900 depending on how it's acting that day, lol. I'm not sure about stock, but I'm sure it's similar.C-Kwik wrote:I wanna say the S13's cut fuel over a certain RPM when decelerating the motor and kick it back on at a particular RPM. If this is the case, the lower threshold would likely have been set based on the factory flywheel (and its corresponding rate of deceleration). So if its delecerating faster with the lightened flywheel, the lower threshold may be at too low an RPM to effectively "catch" the motor before it stops. Depending on how you're tuning your motor, the fix may be as simple as a reflash or a change in some settings.
i know this is a kinda lame question, im not a noob so do flame me i just dont know this one. how do i adjust my idle and if that doesnt fix it what could it be?s13rb25det wrote:I have a ebay "12" pound flywheel which is reaLLY 14LB btw. and I did notice it would stall more often when I installed it. I changed my iacv and bumped the idle to 800rpms and have zero stalls now.