Has anyone used the Empire crank shaft pin kit and still had the damper spin or has it been working well ? I was going to pull stack and I thought while I was in there I would do the kit if it seems to be working well !
well, i am getting blown up engines, so you know they are beating on them :roflmao:
BUMP:
Has anyone used the stock OEM knock off damper like this one?
https://www.ebay.com/itm/01-05-6-6L...nic-Balancer-Dorman-594-419-2332/163303056907
cant find any reviews or threads on it. This is the same brand Auto parts stores carry also
Guys with the older 6.2 Diesel are running them with no issues / mixed reviews
Alex
IMO buy a better damper if yours is junk. I personally like Fluidampr but ATI/SoCal is another great damper. The OEM damper works ok but at ~$300 you're most of the way to a better damper. If you don't plan on ever doing anything more to your truck then stock will work/has worked for many.
do you know why the fluidampr is not the best choice over a factory balancer or an ati/socal? do you know why putting a "better" damper on isnt really all that much better on a stock engine?
sometimes i think you just copy/paste.
Why do you believe that a Fluidampr is not a viable choice? I would argue that is opinion. With the data I have seen from my place of employment (our dampers are Banks viscous dampers, same concept as Fluidampr) on engine testing data/harmonics as well as the data published by Wagler they are definitely a viable option. Is the Fluidampr heavier on a scale at ~24lbs? Yes but it is all not inertial/rotational load. The rotational mass of a Fluidampr is ~16lbs whereas an ATI/SoCal is ~19lbs. The factory pin also doesn't have enough surface area to transfer loads to the damper which is shown by the crank pins eating into factory dampers or being rounded over/snapping. The factory damper also does not have anywhere near the quality of fitment as an aftermarket damper.
I agree they aren't better on a stock engine which is why post reads "if you don't plan on ever doing anything more to your truck then stock will work/has worked for many". I was implying if the OP plans on ever building an engine or thinks he may then it isn't a bad investment now if the OE damper is shot.
stock damper is 17.5 lbs for the guy who just posted asking about them bringing this thread up (LLY), ati/socal is 16.5 lbs for EXTERNALLY balanced engine. your facts from wagler are based off an INTERNALLY balanced engine where the fluid damper works better. Banks doesnt even sell externally balanced dampers for older trucks but even so, they are not rebranded fluidampr, they are tuned to the harmonics they have seen and built the balancer around it. Fluidampr does NOT dampen near as well as the ATI/Socal damper and Guy has plenty to show for it on an externally balanced engine. They will work better on a broader spectrum of harmonics. Fingers has posted info about this as well and done research. the factory damper does a better job at killing harmonics as well since it was again designed around the engine.
regardless of rotational mass, you still have an additional 6-8lbs sitting out on the leverage point of the crank that is not exactly the strongest to begin with. add in the fact it can not work as well in an external balance environment and you are not helping the crank
also will point out the fluidampr is slip fit while Socals/ATI is closer to a press on. less chance of loosing a pin or needing to add a second pin. The pin snapping is a mute point between a fluidampr and stock damper.
All this info is on here.
stock damper is 17.5 lbs for the guy who just posted asking about them bringing this thread up (LLY), ati/socal is 16.5 lbs for EXTERNALLY balanced engine. your facts from wagler are based off an INTERNALLY balanced engine where the fluid damper works better. Banks doesnt even sell externally balanced dampers for older trucks but even so, they are not rebranded fluidampr, they are tuned to the harmonics they have seen and built the balancer around it. Fluidampr does NOT dampen near as well as the ATI/Socal damper and Guy has plenty to show for it on an externally balanced engine. They will work better on a broader spectrum of harmonics. Fingers has posted info about this as well and done research. the factory damper does a better job at killing harmonics as well since it was again designed around the engine.
regardless of rotational mass, you still have an additional 6-8lbs sitting out on the leverage point of the crank that is not exactly the strongest to begin with. add in the fact it can not work as well in an external balance environment and you are not helping the crank
also will point out the fluidampr is slip fit while Socals/ATI is closer to a press on. less chance of loosing a pin or needing to add a second pin. The pin snapping is a mute point between a fluidampr and stock damper.
All this info is on here.