AKfreak
150cc
Your missing the point. Forget about the weight, and forget about the rotation around the string once the wheel is perpendicular to the floor because I'm not talking about the "torque chasing the angular momentum" here (gyroscopic propulsion).... the wheel would spin flat and horizontal to the floor if there were no angular momentum.
So when the wheel hangs from the string and is horizontal to the floor, consider the wheel the propeller on a plane facing straight down to the ground. As the wheel rotation speed increases, the angular momentum wants to force the wheel axle 90 degrees from the string so that the axle is parallel to the floor and perpendicular to the string. So if the plane is still facing down to the ground, the precession wants to move the rotating disk of the prop 90 degrees, which translates to left yaw.
The thing you are missing is the first frames of the video where the wheel is hanging from the sting and not rotating. The difference between that position, and perpendicular position of the rotating wheel, is supported by angular momentum. In an airplane, this force yaws the plane to the left more and more as the speed of the rotating propeller increases. This is one of the other reasons why, in a hover, and with no increases AoA, when you goose the throttle, the plane jerks to the left.
I'll find another video to explain this further.
[video=youtube_share;NeXIV-wMVUk]http://youtu.be/NeXIV-wMVUk[/video]