justin_o_guy2
Serious Thumper
   
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What happened?
Posts: 55279
East Texas, 1/2 dallas/la.
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Is there any free play in the clutch lever? It should move freely a little bit. Then, if there Is free play, look at the engine case and see where the clutch actuation arm is, relative to the marks the factory put on the motor/ clutch cover,
How many miles on the bike? What oil are you using? When you pull away from a stop, are you slipping the clutch usually? When it's slipping and you goose it, it's seriously glazing the disks. I'm Hoping it's just an adjustment problem, but, how much it got hurt by winding up the RPMs is the next question, IF the reason it slipped was just the clutch cable adjustment being too tight. It's possible that the rod ( Dave's gonna be so proud of me ) is needing replaced with a shorter one. The position of the actuator arm will tell if that's what is the Reason it slipped. Also, what oil is in it matters. You may get away with an adjustment. You may be going into the clutch cover and maybe even have to pull the clutch and check out the disks. What oil? Miles on the bike? Position of the clutch arm? Slack in the clutch lever on the handlebars? How much time did you let it run and slip? Before it did that, did anyone DO anything to the bike? Did you watch the guy who was checking out the tire? How long after the visit to the tire guy did it start messing up?
Friction is friction. Get tires sliding and the stopping power drops off. A slipping clutch needs to get the rear wheel/transmission/engine all synchronized and stop slipping. Spinning the engine up, changing to a higher gear, just makes it easier for it to slip. You have the number. I'm just chilling, watching the tube.
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