FinnHammer
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Posts: 240
Denmark
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All,
The tedium of waiting for the right tools proved to be a prolonged ordeal, due to customs intercepting of the parcel from now no longer EU England. However, with the tools at hand, the challenge had just started. The bolt holding the generator rotor seemed to be impossible to unscrew. The impact driver was unable to loosen the bolt. In the end I grabbed the most sturdy spanner I have, the Cross Wheel Wrench I use when I change wheels on the car, and extended one of the perpendiculars with a 1 meter long pipe, and finally the bolt budged, but remained very tough to turn untill finally all the way out, and it is a very long bolt! Turns out, it was given liberal amounts of locktite. I cannot understand why this should be necessary on a keyed taper joint, but what. From this point it was easy to get to the nut holding the flywheel in place, and this nut was solid. The tool to test this was made from a short 50mm socket, which I first faced on the lathe, to remove the generous chamfer, so that it could get a full grip on the nut. This big socket needs a 3/4" driver, so I welded a 30mm 1/2" socket to it, but before that, I turned the 3/4" hole up to fit snugly on the taper of the crank journal, which is a benefit because then the spanner does not tilt or kink, but sits solid on the nut when applying torque to it. Lesson of the day: Unlike the delicate internals of the right side engine cover, on the left side, the cover conceals some rather crude stuff, where the heavy tools come into play. I have been here, I have seen the size of the starter clutch set, and it is not a place I wish to revisit anytime soon.
So the hunt for the clonkin' continues, but since the engine is running strong still, and has neither seized nor blown up, I guess I'd better get accustomed to it.
One big benefit would be the possibility of purchasing the flat top piston in oversize so that it could be fitted to a pristine freshly bored and honed cylinder, instead of to the odd already worn stock 94mm bore.
Cheers, Finn Hammer
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