Today we're driving up to San Miguel, where my Commando lives, and I'll be reinstalling the replacement parts that Paul (at Alton) shipped to me under warranty. I received them from France within 5 days of my first email and that was over Christmas! The Mexican Customs folks did charge me about 18 USD for duty but there was no delay at all and I was quite pleased.
I exchanged several emails with Paul and sent him hi-res pics of the rotor/sprag, the retainer, and the alternator coil assy. One thing that was obvious was that the center of the rotor/sprag had gotten very hot - areas of the metal had turned blue from the heat. Turned out that although I had ordered the chain drive kit, the kit supplied included a washer that is intended to be used for BELT drive commandos. The washer was installed on the rotor/sprag when I received it so I ASSUMED that it was supposed to be there on the bike. There was no mention of the washer in the instructions. Using the washer on a chain drive motor eliminates the clearance that is supposed to exist between the sprag and a spacer which fits between the sprag and the triplex gear on the crank.
The rotor/sprag-washer fit was tight enough to cause a lot of friction but not enough to actually lock the crankshaft/spacer/rotor which would have caused the engine to spin the starter motor once the engine was running. When I pulled the assembly apart, the washer was almost black from heat and the center of the sprag was the same.
I sent the pics to Paul and he responded immediately re that washer, stating that it is ONLY for use with a belt drive system and also expressing surprise that it was in that kit since I had ordered the chain drive kit from Norvil (only difference between the kits is the addition of that washer). He was also surprised that with the washer installed the starter didn't immediately lock up with the engine; I guess I was lucky it didn't! Paul now recommends that the sprag/rotor be installed and rotor nut torqued without the starter chain attached and checked for free/easy turning prior to final assembly. Had I done that, I would have discovered that there was insufficient clearance with that washer in place. I believe the instructions have now been updated to include that. I did check for free-movement of the sprag but I had not torqued the rotor nut to it's full value when I did that; it was tight but not fully tightened. That final tightening is what caused the interference with the washer.
Paul feels that the washer issue is what caused the problem due to the heat involved and subsequent expansion of the rotor which caused interference between the rotor/coil assembly. For the rotor/sprag to be as blue/black as it is around the center it looks to me like it would have had to become nearly red hot so the expansion/collision with the coils makes sense to me.
So...I'm confident that this will not repeat once I install the new sprag/rotor and new spacer WITHOUT that washer!
Again, I have nothing but praise for the way Paul and Beverley handled this.
Totally unrelated...I rode a new Triumph Daytona 675 R a couple of days ago. I guess we all need a second bike - I may have found it! It even has an electric starter ALREADY installed!
