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There is only a few thou backlash in the bevel gears. All of the 'Backlash' people are feeling is from the engagement dogs that engage to lock each gear set to the shaft for that particular ratio.Pete
Quite frankly I don't think you are doing your bike drive line any favors....
I seriously doubt that gently pushing the bike back and forth is producing any more stress on the drive line than accelerating and decelerating at speed. But, what do I know?
I believe most of the backlash in my '07 Norge is from the cush drive assembly in the transmission. The Carc on my bike has minimal lash. I think I remember the early Brevas had a recall which was not extended to the other CARC bikes perhaps because the issue did not result in catastrophic failure, but rather just atrocious noise. Mine is very noisy if the clutch/throttle/shifter are used in a sloppy manner. It currently has 65000 miles without failure. How this may relate to your V7 in unknown.Best,Peter
Inches of rotation as measured at the point where the tire touches the wheel:1st gear 1.5"2nd gear 1.75"3rd gear 1.875"4th gear 1.925"5th gear 1.75"6th gear 2.0"
I presume these numbers are for the Norge you mentioned in an earlier post. It would be interesting to have comparison numbers for other models. Thanks.
"Inches" of slop doesn't mean much in my opinion. Depending on wheel diameter and where you measure it it means something different. I think degrees of rotation would be more informative.
But here's some more data from the garage anyway . Don't know how to easily measure degrees of rotation so will report radius at measurement point, backlash in inches in each gear, mileage, bike. <snip>Yeah, I've got too much time on my hands..
[Lecture mode on]: When I was a university professor and ran a good size research group, I taught my grad students and postdocs to record and report the raw data whenever possible. The measurement I reported here was the distance my wheel travelled, not degrees of rotation. Now, If I let you know that my bike has OEM wheels and tires, the rear tire being size 130/80-17, then you can convert my distance measurement to degrees rotation, or any other derived number, if you wish.I once calculated the speed of light in furlongs per fortnight. The answer wasn't very useful.
When you measure driveline slop like I recommended, on centerstand, in neutral, fore/aft rotaton of the rear wheel, you are only measuring play in the driveline(U-joint). Most all the other slop is out of play.
.. . or you could skip the furlongs, fortnights, and oem/2 conversions to whatever someone else's roll distance is relative to tire size and go with degrees which would be the straight-up same for everyone's wheel regardless . . . . oh . . . .wait. college professor. nevermind.
Can't quite figure that out. Please enlighten.