Hey everyone, I have a build thread going over yonder, but I thought it would be better to post this question in the main forum to hopefully reach a wider audience.
Background: I am planning on using this adapter to bolt a T5 or TKX with a SBC bell housing onto an Ecotec, and benefit from the larger clutch from the V8.
With the adapter kit, I'd be bolting the following parts together in a big sandwich:
Ecotec crankshaft <- Ecotec flex plate <- adapter <- SBC flywheel
(I am not using the triangular plate they show in the picture of the kit, that's for driving a torque converter.)
Miata guys have been using a similar adapter from EcotecMiata to bolt Miata transmissions onto Ecotecs for a while now, and some of them have been having problems breaking flex plates. The endurance road race guys, at least anecdotally, have found that over 50 hours of track time, the flex plate tends to let go. The sample size is small, of course, and I have no idea what 50 hours of track time equates to on the street (perhaps years, perhaps forever) but it's a point of failure I'd like to try to eliminate if I can.
My theory for why some people were breaking flex plates with the EcotecMiata adapter is that because the flex plate no longer has a torque converter bolted to it for support, it's getting bent somehow; maybe it bends a little sometimes when the starter engages it, or maybe some guys were installing flex plates that were already bent without knowing it. In any case, once the flex plate is bent, it can fatigue itself to death at high RPM. Example flex plate carnage pictures from an Ecotec Miata Facebook group:
EcotecMiata recently released a billet chromoly flywheel that replaces their old adapter solution, and thus eliminates this problem. I asked Speed Gems, who make the Ecotec-to-SBC adapter, whether they could come up with something similar, and their answer was basically that with enough money, anything is possible. That's about what I expected, and before going that route, I'd like to try to make the adapter solution work.
It seems like the simplest fix would be to support the flex plate by just bolting it to the back of the flywheel, like it would normally be bolted to a torque converter. That would mean drilling the flywheel in 3 places and machining 3 stand-offs to go between the flywheel and the flex plate. With the bell housing adapter bolted onto the block, there would be no way to tighten bolts from the block side of the flex plate like you would with a torque converter, except maybe through the starter hole, which sounds like a pain. So it seems like the bolts would have to go in from the clutch disc side of the flywheel, with countersunk holes, and I may end up welding nuts, or just the whole stand-offs, onto the flex plate.
I would then take the flex plate + adapter + flywheel assembly to a machine shop to be balanced together. Since it would be getting balanced after the fact, I don't think the location of the holes in the flywheel would even need to be extremely precise; probably something I could do myself with transfer punches and a drill press. I have a buddy with a bench top lathe who could help me with the spacers.
So, does this make sense? Any feedback or constructive criticism on this whole scheme would be greatly appreciated. Thanks!