Air filters....Think "still air volume" and "laminar flow".......
Air filters....Think "still air volume" and "laminar flow".......
Nice trick with the stretching of the roller springs. Did you check/set the valve clearances before testing the compression? I scanned through the thread and I don't see that mentioned, but could have missed it. I hope the smoke clears up one way or the other.
2 Questions here. Is this a Denso plate?
That looks like a Dunlop K70
I like the idea of removable baffles - is there room in there to add packing material? If so, is it appropriate for these pipes?
I also like that tread pattern - nice photo. Have you run it more?
No test ride. Clutch frozen good.
Oh look, someone threw some glitter in my oil filter.
That's not from the little bit that you've run the motor, is it?
Looks like it was run for a while with a loose cam chain. Good thing that centrifugal oil filter did its job and caught the pieces.
I had loosened the adjuster lock bolt but did not hear any movement. Hard to verify that adjuster wasn't stuck or that it functioned. Don't know if a dentist mirror can see cam sprocket from tappet holes. Given the glitter evidence in the oil, this may all be academic.
I'll fix the clutch plates because... and then decide to act upon the writing on the wall, i.e. drop motor, split cases or pop head, or both.
Well, then it's a good thing you pulled it apart. Someone didn't have or follow the manual... doesn't that cam chain have a clip-type master link? I see you broke the chain.
Be sure to pull the adjuster plunger out of the head and check for burrs on the flat side, from the PO overtightening the adjuster bolt.
How do the bores look? I don't know these machines well. Am I correct to think these are standard [sized] pistons? And was the head gasket sealed to the bottom of the cylinder head with something?
Looks good without deep scratching, should hone pretty well. As far as I can tell, all looks to be standard size.
Nothing on the head gasket as found. If I were to re-use it, I would try the recommendation, I got here, of copper spray and a tiny amount of RTV around the green Orings.
I'm sorry I don't have an answer to your question, but I popped into the neighborhood (of this thread) and wanted to share my admiration for this clutch undertaking. It looks like delicate work. I followed the links to the eBay description and those guys from Italy look to know a few things about these bikes. Did I understand correctly that they're recommending the removal of that 1.5mm due to high temp expansion under racing conditions?
This clutch design uses a lifter rod, right? Would the travel of the rod provide a rough estimate of the free space when the clutch is disengaged?
I'm not sure I understood the meaning of "cheap skate flare up" in your earlier post. Would you mind elaborating?
Looks good without deep scratching, should hone pretty well. As far as I can tell, all looks to be standard size.
Nothing on the head gasket as found. If I were to re-use it, I would try the recommendation, I got here, of copper spray and a tiny amount of RTV around the green Orings.
I'm hoping to learn from these various cheapskate methods you sometimes inject in your projects, so I wanted to make sure I wasn't missing anything -- thanks for the explanation.
Did you choose to follow your friend's recommendation with this kit out of necessity, for the performance gains, or just because? All good reasons in my book.
I have a number of new CB/CL OEM Honda head gaskets and base gaskets etc for the 305cc motors.
I would not reuse a head gasket on any build for the reasons Tom mentioned they are designed to be used once. That opinion and 10 cents used to get a cup of coffee. :biggrin:
Woops this is a CB160 not a 305. Can't keep up with all the bikes your working on these days. lol.
I thanked the other guy for being so up front, honest and helpful in the referral. I'll go back with something bigger to bore when I can.
Good move, you have to keep machinists happy when they treat you right. Good ones are hard enough to find as it is, you definitely want to hold onto one when you do find them.
Ring gap spec in FSM is 0.15-0.35 compression(s) and 0.10-0.30 oil, at 15mm from bottom. Any recommendations on this?
Glad you found someone to do the job. Have you checked the current gaps?
I'll be curious to hear recommendations, too. Naively, I would assume closer to the bottom of the spec is better (compression), but perhaps I'm overlooking competing factors (heat generation, oil flow?).