I am not stepping on anybodies toes but maybe we need to fully understand what ours rotors are doing and what forces are applied to them.....Ebie, I think what PtKay is (correctly) pointing out is the mistaken assumption that the gyro disc attitude is changed by means of weight shift (i.e "pulling or pushing up, down,left or right etc.as per a trike wing - albeit on a gyro via the control linkages). This is not the case.
It is gyroscopic precession (not weight) which changes the disc attitude - i.e. the pilot input (via the control linkages) merely changes the rotor blade Angle of Incidence and gyroscopic precession (and thus the disc attitude change) occurs 90' degrees later.
wiki explains it quite nicely:
If the rotor disk is to be tilted forward (to gain forward velocity), its rotation requires that the downward net force on the blade be applied roughly 90 degrees (depending on blade configuration) before that blade gets to the 12 o'clock position. This means the pitch of each blade will decrease as they pass through 3 o'clock, assuming the rotor blades are turning CCW as viewed from above looking down at the helicopter. The same applies if a banked turn to the left or right is desired; the pitch change will occur when the blades are at 6 and 12 o'clock, as appropriate. Whatever position the rotor disc needs to placed at, each blade must change its pitch to effect that change 90 degrees prior to reaching the position that would be necessary for a non-rotating disc.
Sometimes Wikipedia can make mistakes too.......
Summation:
A 'floppy' teetering rotor will not experience any gyroscopic precession. This is because it is a 2-blade rotor and there is nothing at 90-degrees ahead of the blades to gyroscopically 'precess'.
An absolutely rigid rotor will act like a gyroscope and therefore experience precession. The amount of gyroscopic precession should be very small though, because;
The rotor has relatively little mass,
It must overcome the inertia of the helicopter as well as the rotor, and
No rotor yet has achieved this high a level of rigidity
Regards Eben Jnr