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What's in your gut that says the crank is toast? The screws will come out and that face can be recut to smooth it out. Since you've survived the crabbing, the rest should be downhill.
Bit of a touch-up and a new set of boltsPerhaps the bolts were too loose and flogged off.
However I torqued, in a cross hatch pattern, 1/8 turn until snug, then 1/8 turn with torque wrench set to 30 ft/lbs until torque setting was met. I didn't do it in stages. For instance bring to 15 ft/lbs, then 20 ft/lbs, etc...
Umm what was the final setting, I won't claim to do Guzzi's but the flywheel bolts are just about the tightest bolts in any motor 120ft/lbs is normal.
With good bolts, it is surprising that even a little too much torque did them in. And off of the top of my head I thought they were 30ft/lb anyway. I assume they were new.Any chance that the flywheel or crank surface was oily so the flywheel was moving?Me, being cheap, would clean things up with a wetstone and put it back. If it doesn't vibrate, you are good. Getting those hard loctited bolts out will be the challenge.And get a new bolt/washer kit from MGcycle.
What size are those bolts? 10.9 mark is for high torque bolts that are almost the same as grade 8 bolts in US
The 10.9 designates the tensile strength of a metric bolt and should be stamped on the head of the bolt. If it isn't marked (or has a number less than that), then unless its a special MG designed part, is aint high tensile (if it says 12.9 then that's OK - as even higher tensile strength) A couple of other thoughtsIf you put a shit load of Loctite down the holes then I guess you could effectively hydraulic the bolt. ie the thread lock in the bottom of the hole would prevent the bolt from pulling up properly even if the torque wrench clicked as expected Is your torque wrench in calibration?Did you tighten it up diagonally as good practice would suggest?
http://www.cncexpo.com/MetricBoltTorque.aspxM8 bolts of any spec will need to be torqued to inch pounds. Also, if those bolt were over snugged previously they were compromised and should have been replaced.Ran into this very issue when changing from a single to dual plate clutch.
Chaos,Where in Ct are you located?Gerry
okeverybody take a breath on account of 22lb/ft and 30lb/ft are both correct answers. Both torque values are listed in guzzi torque tables.Now for what the heck.Both are correct. Only one is right.Here's 30# torque10.9 grade bolts. six heads popped. six shafts sheared. all six removed in three pieces each. I'd post the other pics but they are identical to the OP's.I am lucky -- I drilled mine out in situ without nicking threads. I dressed up the mating surfaces and have just re-centered the torque converter. If retorquing to 29 is a mistake, I'd best know it right now on account of I'm at MMnorth's house in Vancouver WA with a crapload of reassembly to do.So . . .. do I have to redisassebleize and retorque? I've taken my brand new 8x1.25 10.9's to 29lb/ft. I have always done this. This is the first failure of never-used flywheel bolts, ever.
Another possibility is " counterfeit bolts" that are not true 10.9
damn I wish some more mechanics would weigh in. I'm late getting this borrowed dial indicator back.