Holden202T wrote:umm, wouldn't it turn at half engine speed ?
and really i would have said theres bugger all load on it and the bearing in the front is pretty decent for what its doing!
but yeah no one can deny the buick is well designed!
no its engine speed.
timing set brings the cam to half speed, balance shaft gears are 1:2 doubling the speed of the what the cam does thus back to engine speed but the main difference is its counter rotating, ie. counter clockwise to the engine.
In a inline 4 there are 2 rotating shafts counter and one non counter. They turn at 2x engine speed to fix a 2nd order harmonic vibration.
The force would be pretty big.
the radius of the shaft is about 30mm with each counter weight being at a guess 700-1Kg each half.
I have taken 750g as a figure to give you an idea. According to centrifugal calculators thats pulling 838Gs and at weight of 750g is 629Kg of force at each bearing as a ball park at 5000rpm.
by any standard, thats a lot!
just holding the shaft by the bearing and spinning it in your hand shakes your arm around just tuning it what might be 100rpm?
imagine the Gs on a turbo impeller! I worked out if the impeller is 100mm diameter, Have no idea what the standard size is these days. lets just say 100mm.
well at 150,000rpm its pulling over 1.2 million Gs!

1 gram out of balance its got over 1250kg force of unbalance. Some turbo can spool over 250k rpm.
And thats why I am surprised they last so long.
I'm the director of VSH (Vlad's Spec Holden), because HSV were doing it ass about.