I am AN A&P IA in Clarksville TN had a C175 land here Friday with a mag problem noticed The spinner had a wobble to it when they shut it down found that two of the mount bolt flanges on the aft spinner plate were cracked plane has less than 100 hours since last annual. Anyone have any Idea's as to what to look for as a cause?
Let me guess this is with a 180 hp Lycoming conversion 175.
Most spinner cracking is caused by transverse vibration or torsional vibration, and not by simple out-of balance operation.
All engines have torsional vibration due to firing pulses. But only six cylinder engines are mechanically balanced for transverse vibration,
However, a much higher level of transverse and torsional vibration is present in all 4 cyl opposed engines, and it is at twice the crankshaft RPM - IOW about 80 Hz.
Some of this (the squirm) is because the left and right cylinders are not directly opposite each other. Some is because the crank throws are 180 degrees apart. Even a well balanced 4 cyl engine will want to squirm (about a vertical axis) about the engine CG, on its mounts at ~80 Hz (~2400 rpm). This vibration component is caused by the finite length of the connecting rods and is also the source of much alternator bracket failure on 4 cyl Lycoming engines.
In addition, the 80 Hz torsional vibration due to simple internal mechanics is much much greater than the 120 Hz component for a 6 cyl engine.
A spinner is a large highly stressed lightweight structure exposed to high frequency vibration. That's why it wants to crack. The centrifugal acceleration at 2400 rpm and a 6 inch radius is about 1000 g's so any modification or balance weight attachment isn't a trivial affair.
Otherwise I contend the spinner balance itself isn't really a major factor since it is only a 1/start cycle input.