Looks interesting..
How much do that set you back??
I have 4 Bryant cranks made from SVO American forgings, not billet. (600 inch motors) I can't give you an exact cost for billet. What I can tell you is you are receiving the absolute highest quality.
I thought they had a cost calclator on their site?
2112 brings up an interesting point.
It appears vogue these days to tagline everything with "billet" as if that means something generally accepted and understood. According to Merriam-Webster there are a number of different definitions to this term. high performance engines. I struggl...p://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/billet
Usually crankshafts are either made from "cast" steel (low specific power engines) or "forged" steel for high power,
Any of you engine builders who use these crankshafts in engine builds all the time care to explain how this term applies? I really just do not see how a billet
crankshaft relates (I believe the intended value) to a forged crankshaft.
So is the term "billet" overloaded in normal usage? I'd always thought of "billet" as a block of aluminum and that the iron equivalent was "forged". So I was trying to figure out what magic floobie dust had been applied to make an aluminum crankshaft. Just trying to sort out the dictionary.
Billet means that magical forces have been brought to bare on the material (usually real dragons are used to heat the material before the Keebler elves dip it in fudge). If you are using the highest quality billet forging process, then you can bet the bank that Yoda or some other high ranking Jedi has had a hand in shaping the part after the Keebler boys are done.
Hope this helps.
Billet means that magical forces have been brought to bare on the material (usually real dragons are used to heat the material before the Keebler elves dip it in fudge). If you are using the highest quality billet forging process, then you can bet the bank that Yoda or some other high ranking Jedi has had a hand in shaping the part after the Keebler boys are done. Hope this helps.