d_jabsd said:
i don't have the means to make my own, so i'm not saying it's that simple, but i guaranteed you it isn't $300+ x 1000+ buyers complicated either. i'm tired of paying for R&D that was paid off decades ago. Everyone needs to make a profit, but you don't need to screw people over in the process.
You guarantee it, huh? I'm going to let you in on a little secret: The R&D costs for putting out a new flywheel are simple overhead costs. They're not baked in and recouped by individual project. The only costs like that would be if you were needing capital investments like forging dies, casting molds, or something like that. Otherwise it's literally just about actual production labor, materials, and quantities.
Stock style clutches and flywheels outsell performance aftermarket units by probably 100:1 or more, so they're made differently. Comparing the cost of a lightweight flywheel to a stock style (including 'heavy duty') clutch is simply not a fair comparison. A much more direct comparison would be the price out a 1 disc aluminum racing clutch. Manufacturing, materials, and quantities are much more similar between the two. You'll be shocked at what those cost, even though there is only a fraction of the variation compared to flywheels, since the same physical clutch can used across the full range of flywheel applications.
So lets look at what it takes to make a typical performance aftermarket flywheel...
Buy 12" bar stock of 4140HT steel.
Saw through the 12" bar to slab off a disc of ring gear material.
Turn the 12" disc into a 12" hoop of ring gear material.
Hobb teeth into the OD of the 12" hoop.
QA check the ring gear.
Buy 12" bar stock of 6061-T6 aluminum.
Saw throught the 12" bar to slab off a disc of flywheel material.
Turn the 12" disc into a flywheel blank.
Mill the flywheel blank to complete the flywheel base.
QA check the flywheel base.
Buy 10" bar stock 1045 steel.
Saw through 10" steel bar to slab off a disc of friction surface material
Turn the 10" disc into a friction plate blank.
Mill the friction plate blank to complete the friction blank.
QA check the friction blank.
Press fit the ring gear on to the flywheel and install retention screws. Install friction plate with retention screws.
QA check completed flywheel.
Now each non-QA (overhead) operation involves ~1 hour of setup time. Since we don't sell large quantities of aftermarket flywheels and can't afford to maintain large excess inventory levels, we'll have to run these in batches of 20 for a reasonably popular car. Assuming an average of $150/hr fully burdened machine time labor rate, that's $7.50 per op per flywheel. With 10 direct labor ops, that's $75 just in setup labor for our reasonably popular car...Less popular and it would be half the run quantities at double the setup costs. I'd say you'll also probably do double that (a mere 6min/op) for direct labor run time hours. So that's another $150, bringing you up to $225 just in labor. Now for raw material we're probably talking something on the order of $25 for 12"OD x 3/4"T 4140HT, $75 for 12"OD x 2"T 6061-T6, and $10 for 10"OD x 1/2"T 1045. That puts us at a total actual cost to produce of $335...Plus the cost of SFI certification. Plus a nominal profit to manufacturer. Plus nominal profit to retailer...And that doesn't even account for the ones that don't sell right away, and are literally just wasted money sitting on the shelf for months/years.
So yeah...Tell me again about how they're 'screwing people over' here.
This why it's so hard to get companies to make quality performance aftermarket parts for any but the most popular to modify cars... There is simply not enough money in it to justify dealing with the majority of cheapskate owners that whine about how nobody makes parts for their cars, but then don't buy the parts when you do because it's 'overpriced'.