FinnHammer
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Posts: 240
Denmark
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Dave, Mike, Thanks for your comments. The reason for my plan of going one step further than the DR650 hub +1plate mod is, that I seem to remember reading that when the silent muffler entered the equation, even the DR650+ clutch started to slip.Then again, I am prone to overkill, and the stock clutch is already slipping in an unmodified engine.
I surely don't intend to diss your experiences, you have both been into this game for over a decade, so I will probably just stick to the stock modification with one plate extra on a DR650 hub, and the DR650 springs.I already have the Sneazy cams ready.
If I do proceed to try these special metal discs, I will have them vater jet cut, or perhaps laser cut, from 3mm thick steel plate. Mount in the lathe in a custom designed chuck and turn each side one millimeter. This may have to be done simultaneously on both sides, to acheive proper parallel faces, with a custom cutting tool, but I am a toolmaker, so not to worry too much about that.
One thing I do not understand, is the function of the so called wave washer. For one, in my book, it is not a wave washer at all, it is a disc spring, and a pretty stiff one at that. A real wave washer between each of all the metal discs, weak enough to be compressed easilly by the coil springs, but strong enough to separate the discs during clutch disengagement, now, that would make sense, but the disc spring as it is, leaves me with out a clue of what it's function can be. I seem to recall some talk in the club house of Yamaha Club AArhus, late one evening, back in 1969, about some clutches that had an o-ring between the metal discs, just a tad bigger in diametre than the friction disc thickness, designed to separate the clutch plates during disengagement, but I cannot find them in any spare part catalogue from that time, so It was probably just some idle pondering. What exactly happens to the clutch function when the wave washer is omitted?
The valve distance I quoted to 28mm was from my rusty memory, it is 38mm of course, and that pretty much limits the maximum valve diameter to 37.5mm. That could bring about a 13% increase in inlet area, perhaps less, since the air entering close to the near overlap would seem to be working against each other. A flow bench would be needed to find out.
I would like to read some about port flow, seat angles, seat width etc, can anyone recommend a good book to start me off.
Cheers, Finn Hammer
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