Well,, first things first.
The concrete i used doesnīt contain large rocks.
Itīs more like 2-3mm big 'rocks'.
And i blended the concrete 'low on water'. thereby when filling the tube the small rocks didn't 'fall out' and landed at the bottom.
I had the tube standing up when filling.
And when 'burning' the concrete increases in volume by ~2%
So it fills tube nicely after i vibrated it a bit to get air out.
Second, i have run the roller at 2600rpm as of today, no vibrations(this tells me i can rev it further).
And i have just balanced it roughly by heating the bearings to get lower resistance from grease in the bearings.
And then just added material(about 300g, not much at all actually) at the point that was always straight upwards when the roller stopped when i spun it by hand.
This gives me only static balancing, i know.
But it gives me a clue where to add or retract weight if it starts to vibrate on higher rpmīs.
And lastly, This spring i will when i take it apart for painting, Iīll go to a friend of mine that has a engineshop.
He owns a crankbalancingmachine(for different car/truck crankshafts) that can take my roller with ease.
So, i canīt see any problems with concrete...

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