Surviving Philly
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SuzukiSavage.com Rocks!
Posts: 293
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DBM,
Let me first say that your videos are very well made despite your apparent limited experience with this (wouldn't have noticed, they are well-edited and the audio is great.) I would sincerely encourage you to generate more content (if you don't already) via YouTube because your knowledge not just with this bike but generally, in terms of resourcefulness, fabrication, etc. is tremendously useful to us young aspiring gearheads.
Back to the issue at hand:
Great suggestion with fabricating shims from feeler gauges -- this is very clever and I do have some junk gauges to cannibalize for this purpose, however -- Am I correct in assuming that the brand-new, out-of-the-box cam lobe and actuating shaft should have exactly zero loss of motion? would this be an anticipated modification should loss of motion start to present itself again in the future?
additionally, let me further summarise this group diagnostic for the sake of clarity, please correct any of the following if written in error:
1. Based on the pictures provided today, you have apprehensively concluded that, because the arm is able to be manipulated by hand, that the cam is on the hard stop build into the cover.
2. The Cam is on the hard stop because the entire clutch assembly is pushing to the right much more than is desireable in a mechanically sound savage, due to the pressure plate wear.
3. Because the Cam is resting on the hard stop along with the pressure plate wear, the disks cannot fully engage because there is no move movement by which to move further to the right. a shorter pushrod could temporarily allievate this, however there is only so far to the right the entire assembly can move before you start running into externalities -- such as the bolt heads hitting the shaft, which is what I experienced earlier.
All of this being said -- here is what I do not yet understand and where I feel this journey is continuing towards.
Months ago, when I posted that first pressure plate which was totally worn away, what I did immediately afterward was to replace that pressure plate, AND put a brand new barnett kit (disks, steels, and springs) in the bike. It was a relatively very short period of time until the pressure plate was totally worn away again and the disks were totally wapred/ glazed. (here is a picture I should have posted weeks ago of all of the plates/disks).
We know there is loss of motion between the shaft and the cam, as evidenced by the pictures today showing the position of the arm.
Does this loss of motion directly correlate to me wearing down these clutch packs/pressure plates so quickly and if so, how?
My working theory is that loss of motion between the cam and the shaft causes the rotation of that shaft in relation to the force acted upon the cam to be totally out of wack, and because of this the cam is not rotating to the degree it should due to the loss of motion -- with the cam not fully rotation the plates cannot fully disengage, and because of this start to wear -- simultaneously as the entire pack moves to the right due to this aggressive wear, the cam is forced onto the hard stop with no free play, causing the pack to not be fully clinched together when the lever is not pulled.
So basically, the clutch is in a condition of weird contact at all times, making it burn out.
Sorry I'm losing steam here ... lost my train of thought.
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