DAG
Yes, my balls tickled from that landing
- Location
- Charlotte, NC
prob a long shot,, but any warranty?
prob a long shot,, but any warranty?
This is impossible to answer because the more RPM you do the more the drain on the battery, fortunately Jet Skis are relatively low reving ( compared to a 2 stroke bike). All I can say is I have never know anyone kill a battery in a day and I have known lots of people use their skis all day and then the next all day without having to charge their battery. We do use quality gel batteries though.
The pick up is ours, it's a hall effect sensor.
I'll let you know on the Flywheel tomorrow when we get to work.
What is the weight of the flywheel?
Thanks!
:wink: Would you call this Nearly Total Loss.I love it.
Now give us an add-on kit with 2 small magnets for the flywheel, a tiny coil for the stator, and let it use the stock voltage regulator to keep the battery just barely charged, but with a switch to disable if needed.
:wink: Would you call this Nearly Total Loss.
Chris.
How about Total Equilibrium?
Seriously though, machine the flywheel to accept 2 small magnets and the stator to accept a small coil that could power the oem regulator. I guarantee you'd have people buying that as an addon.
Mmmm now you got me thinking, there are already 4 small magnets in the flywheel and plenty of room on the stator!
Just remember me when you sell thousands of these...
Weighed it today, its 1.56LBS
Chris
Indeed it is. The MSD flywheel is 1.75 lbs.
I thought the MSD flywheel was lighter than 1.75lb. Probably false advertising MSD's site
1lbs = 16 oz
1lb 11.8oz = 1.75 lbs
:bigok:
This is really ironic, I've been thinking all day about this thinking maybe my answer may be taken wrong as being 1 lbs 5ozs. My answer of 1.56 lbs is meant as just over 1 and a half pounds. We weighed in metric at 712g, we used the following to convert to imperial: 712g multiply by 0.0022 = 1.56 lbs = 1lbs 8.96ozs:banghead:
Chris
1lbs = 16 oz
1lb 11.8oz = 1.75 lbs
:bigok: