Thankfully, we now have the engine in the frame! If you recall the previous instalment, Ian Bird (only vaguely assisted by muggings here) had found there was a fitment issue. And on the assumption that engine cases rarely, if ever, expand, the only logical conclusion was that the frame must have shrunk.
The truth was not quite as literal as that, but hopefully, you get my drift here. With the rebuilt motor heaved out of the chassis (they really aren’t lightweight, trust me on this one), a set OF bare and empty H1 cases were offered up by way of a sanity check. As expected there was a slight discrepancy of just under a single millimetre between the gap available between the rear mounts and alloy castings. It’s amazing how much the steel brackets had contracted immediately after welding. The initial plan was to use a length of studding, some washers and nuts, and then oh so gently wind the nuts out and spread the frame just a tad.
Unfortunately, we only achieved two things…nothing and bugger all, so an alternative, yet practical solution was sought, which led to some judicious dressing of both rear mounts with a decent quality engineer’s file. As if pre-ordained the empty engine dropped into place and less than half a millimetre of the substantial mounts removed from each side. Satisfied all was well the rebuilt motor was once again carefully wiggled back into its home, bolts, and nuts fitted, tightened and everything triple checked – sorted, finished, completed, done, etc.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der February 2020-Ausgabe von Classic Motorcycle Mechanics.
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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der February 2020-Ausgabe von Classic Motorcycle Mechanics.
Starten Sie Ihre 7-tägige kostenlose Testversion von Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierte Premium-Storys sowie über 8.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
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Honda VFR750R - RC30
If there’s a more worshipped V4 out there, we’ve yet to see it: welcome to our reboot of the awesome VFR750R RC30…
Mountain tension!
Award-winning motorcycle engineer!
Fazer set to STUN!
What do you get when you mix CRK’s lovely café racer kit to Yamaha’s budget middleweight and the recently-retired Martin Fox? Well, one helluva foxy Fazer!
Project Suzuki 1984 RG250 part 4 BRUNO BARES ALL!
This month, while we wait for backorder engine parts, we strip the chassis back to the bare frame, assess what is needed and plan the reassembly…
Project Kawasaki Z900 Stocker part 2 Ralph has a blast!
For the best finish on his Z900’s motor Ralph wants the best, so he visits Stephen Smethurst Casting Renovation to find out how it’s done properly.
Project Suzuki TS400 Part 8 Loom with a view!
We’re getting down into the nitty-gritty this time with component testing and loom building. What could go wrong?
Project Yamaha TX750 Part 12 A question of balance…
Only The Beach Boys had good vibrations… so what’s Mark been up to, to sort out the bad ones coming from his TX750?
Splitting links
Ralph Ferrand works with tools all day long – he sells them too at bikerstoolbox.co.uk so he knows what works.
STAVROS: PRINCE OF PRANKSTERS!
It’s probably fair to say that Stephen JamesParrish’s persona and overall levity throughout his life have muddied the waters as to just how good a bike racer he was back in the day.
Metal magic!
Ralph Ferrand works with tools all day long – he sells them too at bikerstoolbox co uk so he knows what works.. .