I concur.grandpaul said:Pretty dang good, and affordable, especially for '74 & 75
![]()
$25 + postage. I have 4 of them on the shelf
steelcap said:I installed Jim Comstock's sump plug breather - great product if you aren't/don't want to spit the cases.
![]()
steelcap said:I installed Jim Comstock's sump plug breather - great product if you aren't/don't want to spit the cases.
![]()
kommando said:The large breather screws into the sump and replaces the sump filter.
My library has dumptruck loads of feel good fairy tail books for kids and their mommies, but no motorhead literature to be found. Not even a copy of ANY motorcycle periodical.J. M. Leadbeater said:Apparently BMW did a bit or research into crankcase breating many years ago and ended up using a single reed valve. About the diameter of a UK 50 p piece but thicker. In the 1980s we incorporated on into our very cheopo 68 x 68 500 Dommy mounted on the top of the timing chest running the output back into the oil tank. Upon start up the reed clicked away merrily over the first few engine revs then settled down to the odd click every now and then due to blow bye on the rings ????. The pressure pulses being fed back into the top of the oil tank would indent the surface of the oil a couple of inches or so beneath the entry pipe...it amazed me the first time i watched it happen.
Of course a very cheap idea that apparently works very well is to run a say 3/8 -1/2 inch breather pipe directly into a screw cap oil tank and shove a very small hole in the screw cap. at engine start up the compression in the cases pressurises the oil tank forcing some of it out through the small hole...as the pistons go back up trying to suck air back in the small hole allows very little back into the oil tank...over a few engine revs everything settles down......Cheap and easy as I believe used by Triumph at one time and recommended by Quiet Power Drive in the USA for a great many years for use with their dry running primary belt systems for BSA and Triumph motors etc.
Worth a read is the section on crank case breathing in the book 'Tuning BLs A Series Engine' by Mr David Vizard ISBN 0-85429-732-4. Page 397. You dont even have to buy the book... borrowing books for free is what libraries are for which, if we dont use them will soon no longer exist.
johnm said:"Apparently BMW did a bit or research into crankcase breathing many years ago and ended up using a single reed valve. About the diameter of a UK 50 p piece but thicker."
100 % agree. Used one for many years on Dominator 500 race bike and never leaked a drop of oil.
On the race bike used three breather pipes. 1 off where the generator used to mount, 1 off the original breather on the nearside crankcase at the back, and 1 off a tappet cover. Plumbed all three together and then through the BMW reed valve to a bottle. Got less than a 1 ml of oil every meeting in the bottle.
With Castrol R oil you must blow a bit of brake clean through the valve every few meetings otherwise the oil will "glue" it shut.
This is a photo of the reed valve and a small chamber I made on the lath to mount it in.
![]()