KenS wrote: Fri Feb 14, 2025 7:24 pmAttached is a spreadsheet ...
A few more words (and pictures...) might be of help. The spreadsheet calls for the "Conrod small-end bush or bearing" in the upper calculation, but just the "Conrod small-end" in the lower one. To be clear, both are the same. To avoid confusion, it might be better to drop the 'small end bush or bearing', or add the words 'with the' to both. The next photograph shows how I measure this, with the crankshaft rotated such that the rod is horizontal.
Typical instructions show hanging the big end separately from a wire, but that requires taking the crankshaft apart, and it isn't needed for a rod having a roller bearing since the friction is negligible. Also, although my scale has 0.01 g sensitivity, if all the measurements were off by 1 g in the same direction, the error in balance factor only would be 0.1%, which would have negligible effect on the vibration.
The next photograph shows how I hang the weights from the small end.
The plastic cup is part of the total hanging weight and using it, instead of wrapping the wire around the weights, makes the process much faster. Also, the crankshaft doesn't care if high precision balance weights are used, or rusty bolts, washers, or whatever that's handy. All that matters is the weight.
The next photograph shows why you need to balance the crankshaft if you change the piston, even if the new piston is "identical" to the old one.
In the case of my 1928 Ariel, the lighter aftermarket piston I bought (Omega) weighed 81.5 g less than the heavier (Gandini) one. If the balance had been 66% with the lighter piston, and everything else was the same (rings, pin, circlips), it would have been 59.4% if the heavier were substituted without rebalancing the crankshaft.
I was lucky to find two people with original pistons for my Ariel, one of which was NOS. Working backwards, I calculated the original balance factor used by the factory was 64.8±1%. Through a happy coincidence, it was 65.5±0.4% with the Omega, so I was able to use it without having to bother drilling or adding weight to the crankshaft.