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That's your problem!I've had exactly this issue on an Sport 1100 I bought. Previous owner couldn't get the clutch to work so put a 3mm ball in there.He did about 30kms like thar before I bought it and it jammed in gear on my first ride.Take the 3mm ball out. The issue will be clutch adjustment with the sureflex plates.The sureflex plates are crap, they expand as they warm so you need to adjust it slightly tight when cold. As it warms up the adjustment improves. Do not be tempted to adjust when hot, then when cold it's way to tight and drags.
C ould be the nut loose on crank timing gear.pull timing cover, easy to elemate that, it wouldgive crank the end play that may be the prablem. Hope it is that simple.
No its not. I tried and tried to adjust it out, believe me. Wound the clutch on full to get it to disenengage. Its not that, something wrong, it doesnt even feel right.
Still refused to be solved this issue. Ive pretty much had enough now. The problem must be with the actuation or the disengagement. I can mock up the disenagement by using the centre tool and compress the pressure pate and test for free play.I can see that i have a problem with consistent free play. One side of the flywheel has approx 1-1.5mm of free play in the plates (this sounds a but right to me judging by the percieved movment of the arm/rod) but the other side shows Zero Free play. I.e. even when the plate is fully compressed I have NO free play on the frictions. The problem is the pressure plate is not compressing evenly. As you can see in the pictures below the plate has about 1.5mm of run out (18.85mm vs 20.24) measure from the ring gear flange on the flywheel.Ok, ive followed this through, First suspect the springs are not loating. Ive tried 2 sets of springs (old and new), ive also tested the springs that they locate in the pressure plate ans flywheel. Ive even tried glueing the spring into thr flywheel so i know 100% that they are located and straight! No difference.What also happing is that the surflex plates at 8.4mm thickness and not 8.00mm as per psec, this is losing my nearly a 1mm of free play. The combination of the plates and runout if meaning i am not getting free play in the clutch!!!!QUESTIONS.1. Why do i have 1.5mm of runnout the pressure plates and does this actually matter is it normal.2. do the oversize plates matter?Kev
Bingo...the plate thickness. there is a slightly longer pushrod available that goes with the RAM single plate clutch.That might well cure your problem.
1/ probably spring pressure variation but inadmissible, so yes2/ surmountable, see.earlier posta
You may also need to measure the spring height while glued in the flywheel (BTW: I glue the springs to the flywheel while the flywheel is flat on a bench). You may also want to NOT properly align the pressure plate. Find a tooth that makes the pressure plate sit on the springs between the spring holes.
For the record. When I say glue the springs, I don't mean JB Weld or the like. Use something removable, Permatex #2, silicone adhesive sealant, rubber trim glue.Tom
Im 99% sure the problem was caused by the oversize surflex frictions that measure 8.4mm, which is 0.4mm over size. Times that by 2, i'm losing 0.8mm free play.
Kev: It is worse than you think. Yes, you have inadvertently increased the total thickness of your clutch pack by 0.8mm. But the lever on the back of the transmission is a 'Class-II' lever. The position of the pivot fulcrum and the actuating screw mean that the lever system has perhaps 5:1 or 6:1 ratio of mechanical advantage at the outboard forked end. If you alter the length of the throwout system by 0.8mm, it will present itself as nearly 5mm of position change at the outboard fork end of the transmission lever. And consequently a similar large amount at the hand lever. That screw adjuster in the transmission lever is thus VERY sensitive. Half a turn is a lot!Patrick HayesFremont CA