The problem is packaging, there’s very little clearance on the two sides of the counterweight itself, hence if it was made only of steel (without the high density inserts) it would be inevitably thicker and would significantly increase the crankshaft (and engine) length.riff_raff wrote: First, is the extensive use of tungsten slugs in the counterweights. Apparently, it worked OK, but to me it seems a rather risky approach in an extremely high rpm race engine. One of those slugs coming loose at 17,000 rpm would do a lot of damage. A better approach to maximizing counterweight MOI at minimum mass, would be a more sophisticated counterweight shape (ie. a minimum thickness inner web and maximum thickness outer web, thus putting the counterweight mass where it counts).
As for the distribution of the counterweights on the length, as you can see the counterweights on the cranks at both ends have 3 slugs instead of the 2 present on the other 6 counterweights, so it looks like the distribution of masses has been evaluated, maybe that one is what they found to be the optimal one, at the time, with that engine.
BTW, you mentioned you have seen crankshafts without counterweights, was that the same crankshaft of the Ford V8 you mentioned in the other thread ?