An observation---The governor seems to want to start moving the arm at about 650 rpm. This initial test was made with the counter-spring at it's maximum setting. I am assuming that if the counter-spring was adjusted to not have so much tension on it, the arm would start to move at a lesser rpm. (Hopefully I will find that out tomorrow.) This governor was designed to run off the cam shaft of an engine. The part that I find interesting is that my engines generally idle at about 1000 rpm, and there power band is around 1400 to 1500 rpm. The cam shaft rotates at 1/2 of the crankshaft rpm. --So, it seems that the governor engaging at 650 rpm fits right in with a 1300 rpm crankshaft speed. This could be purely coincidental, or it may be that Westbury actually made this governor, and the spring size he specified for the flyweights is based on actual testing at the time it was designed.