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When using the correct removal tool or suitable substitute and the rotor will not budge. Use a copper hammer and give the head of the removal tool a good rap or two, normally pops right off.Tom
Thanks, all. I had a fuzzy memory of a threaded removal tool I used previously, with (2) different sizes of thread on it's shank, but could not find it after years of not using it. But I DID find a curious straight shaft in a ziplock bag with a seal, and after reading a bit here I realized it's the straight-pin removal tool with a replacement cover seal. How's THAT for luck!To answer Rick's question: Yes, this is for my Cal 2 Auto slippage, it reared it's head suddenly coming home from work after a 5-day trip a couple of weeks previous that included climbing Mt. Washington in low gear, what I thought was a REAL test of the drive system. Worked flawlessly then. I still jerk awake in a cold sweat dreaming of what might have happened if that hex-drive failed climbing up the mtn. After that climb, I had (1) single backfiring incident. Couple of weeks later the familiar symptoms appear. Coincidence? Experienced minds here say "no". I failed a hex a number of years before that after a chronic backfiring spell. In this case, it was a higher-than-normal revving during the 6-mile highway run coming home from work, then after the exit ramp stop sign very little hp being transferred to the rear wheel. I limped the 1/2-home. Convert owners who've experienced this know the feeling (physically & mentally).I would LOVE to re-install an improved hex-drive element, but not sure what the current state-of-the-art is. My last (current) one is a piece of 6mm hex wrench cut to length. I recall Charlie actually mic'ed the cam and pump and had a custom shaft made that closed up some of the slop @ something above 6 mm, so I guess I'll wait to see what the mating elements look like before deciding.
I had a piece of 1/4" Bondhus allen wrench surface ground to 6.2 mm. That fit snug into the cam and better into the pump coupling. 30k miles on it so far.
Just as a point of interest: How do you surface-grind a 6-sided object and take equal amounts off each face? From .25" to 6.2 mm (converting as necessary) is around ~.006" per face. I love the idea, but that ain't much to be able to control it so you don't end up with a lopsided part. Just thinking out loud.....
Pfffft. Just put it on a magnetic chuck on a surface grinder. Easy Peasey..
Please explain this operation to me like I'm a 4-yr old. The setup, what the chuck looks like, what the surface grinder looks like, how the grind depth is controlled, etc, with pictures (best) or hand-waving if necessary.
The video in this auction should answer your questions: https://www.ebay.com/itm/285562109464
And it's made in St. Louie! That's where I bought my first & second Guzzis! I love it for it's functionality and American art form.Maybe I missed it: Is there a way to zero-out net contact with the surface you're grinding, then set the grind depth on a vernier scale on the vertical-grind adjustment? How else could you accurately set the grind depth?