I have the exact question and feelings as you. I hope more people chime in. But I will also let you know what im going to try.
If I top out at 96 or 104 I don't care right now. Maybe I will later , but now I want the sled to wow me with snap and "ready when I need it" performance. Like my 600 but more.
I'm doing this from my phone. So excuse the sloppy formatting.
I weigh 220 w/gear
Gearing. There is a reasonable consensus that this sled is geared too tall. Clutching can help. But gearing and clutching are the best answer. Because the tall hearing will work against even the best clutching. Brock has written about this. He also explains how the new clutch face angles make things worse for tall gearing.
GEARS
I'm going with 1.74 gearing (40 tooth bottom gear, stock 23 tooth top gear and a 70 pitch chain). It has been said that this is an efficient combo due to friendly chain radius, dog leg etc. I got everything off ebay. This sled has 3/4" hyvo gears/chain. You need the longer chain with this combo. Stock is 68 pitch.
With the lower gear ratio, now re clutch to take advantage of the new gearing and keep RPMs correct.
Weights, springs, helix.
For now I'm keeping the stock helix. I have seen many recomendations and I don't have 300 bucks on hand to play with different helixes. I'll deal with weights and springs, then see if I still feel the need for a helix. The stock helix can work okay.
PRIMARY CLUTCH
White 120/310 Primary spring.
EPI 72 gram Belly Buster weights.
Polaris standard #10 profile weights are good too. Brock and others have mentioned liking the belly buster profile and the fact that they are hard all the way thru. The belly busters are also reasonably priced.
Generally, more weight the lighter you are. Less weight the heavier and/or more track and stud load.
The range appears to be 68-74 grams.
Like, a 220 pound guy with a 1/4" ripsaw studded and 1.74 gearing will likely be in the 70 gram weight range. A 260 pound guy maybe 68, a 170 pound guy, maybe 74.
I got 72 gram weights and will grind some off the back of I need them lighter.
SECONARY CLUTCH
I'm going to try the 155/122 spring. Its a bit beefy but will work with stock helix.
If I try another helix later, I'll go with one of the helix spring combos talked about on this site. As of now I'm still learning. I don't fully understand the nomenclature for these helixes and which ones are "full progressive" "dual angle" or straight and why so many numbers identify them. It looks like they have 4 angles and some have a decimal and a dash. Then people in the know use shorthand to identify them and I just want a drink!
"Get youself a 44 fully progressive" says one guy. Then you read in a post that he loves his 66 44/46.6. Is that the 44?Then another post says 55/44 Then helixes on ebay say "66-56ER 64-54 ER". Is that 4 angles? Two helixes for the price of 1? Where do I buy the 55 and why do I feel stupid? Drinking too much?