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clutch & flywheel combo

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Old Jan 19, 2008 | 08:36 PM
  #1  
SHUA619CIVICSI's Avatar
SHUA619CIVICSI
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1991 CIVIC SI
 
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From: SAN DIEGO,TAFT
Default clutch & flywheel combo

im getting a b16a swap. and going 2 also get a clutch and new flywheel so my ???? is what kind should i get act? exstedy? whats the differance between a disket*3-puck*6-puck* not sure if i want a stage 1 stage 2 stage3 whats the differance dont whant 2 runin a tranny so dont know what 2 get all i know is i wantsomething 2 pull hard and dont slip and want 2 inprove some tq
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Old Jan 19, 2008 | 08:46 PM
  #2  
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just get an exedy oem replacement. you dont need any of those stage 2 and up clutches because you wont be making enough torque to need them. unless you're boosting.
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Old Jan 19, 2008 | 09:23 PM
  #3  
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SHUA619CIVICSI
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Originally Posted by Snoopy
just get an exedy oem replacement. you dont need any of those stage 2 and up clutches because you wont be making enough torque to need them. unless you're boosting.
thanks 4 ur in put . didnt know that. so how do u gain more tq?
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Old Jan 19, 2008 | 09:30 PM
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a lot more displacement or boost
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Old Jan 21, 2008 | 02:35 PM
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To answer your question about "pucks" on the clutch: what you have in your car now is what they call an "organic" design, the friction surface is an unbroken concentric ring of surfaces, it allows more slippage giving you a smoother shift, but has less "grabbing" ability between the pressure-plate and the flywheel. Hence, when you increase torque output of the engine significantly you will need to move away from that design, this is where "pucks" come in. Pucks are seperate pads which are arranged in the same radius as the organic one, but because it's not one continuous surface it grabs much more quickly and allows all of the available friction surface to hold against the higher torque levels. The number of pucks is basically just a way of customizing exactly how quickly you want your friction surfaces to grab (cause friction). Also, just another bit of information, you will definitely want a "sprung" clutch design, not solid disc-- that is of course assuming you plan on ever being able to drive this car on the street.

As far as for what you want, an organic design with ceramic-copper friction surface would do just fine. You don't need a pucked design, but it would make your torque transfer during shifting a lot more agressive (it's also going to make your pedal feel a lot stiffer and shorter action).

Flywheels are cool for making cars feel more sporty, it reduces your rotational mass in your powertrain which will allow your engine to rev more quickly and you'll get better net power gains down to the wheels. Careful about how light you make it, though, too light and your engine will stall if not under load.
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Old Jan 21, 2008 | 06:33 PM
  #6  
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Originally Posted by SDtegfan
To answer your question about "pucks" on the clutch: what you have in your car now is what they call an "organic" design, the friction surface is an unbroken concentric ring of surfaces, it allows more slippage giving you a smoother shift, but has less "grabbing" ability between the pressure-plate and the flywheel. Hence, when you increase torque output of the engine significantly you will need to move away from that design, this is where "pucks" come in. Pucks are seperate pads which are arranged in the same radius as the organic one, but because it's not one continuous surface it grabs much more quickly and allows all of the available friction surface to hold against the higher torque levels. The number of pucks is basically just a way of customizing exactly how quickly you want your friction surfaces to grab (cause friction). Also, just another bit of information, you will definitely want a "sprung" clutch design, not solid disc-- that is of course assuming you plan on ever being able to drive this car on the street.

As far as for what you want, an organic design with ceramic-copper friction surface would do just fine. You don't need a pucked design, but it would make your torque transfer during shifting a lot more agressive (it's also going to make your pedal feel a lot stiffer and shorter action).

Flywheels are cool for making cars feel more sporty, it reduces your rotational mass in your powertrain which will allow your engine to rev more quickly and you'll get better net power gains down to the wheels. Careful about how light you make it, though, too light and your engine will stall if not under load.
thanks 4 the info
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