marshg246
VIP MEMBER
"obviously"? Nope!You've misunderstood me. My description of the housing bowing outward in the centre obviously results in the rest of the housing bowing inward whichever way you choose to look at it.
"obviously"? Nope!You've misunderstood me. My description of the housing bowing outward in the centre obviously results in the rest of the housing bowing inward whichever way you choose to look at it.
"obviously"? Nope!
I'm still a little confused how the speedo drive can cause my rear wheel binding when axle is torqued to near spec. It butts against the spacer #31 on the bearing side and the top hat spacer #34 on the outside.
It must be as I can't even get a .0015 feeler gauge between the speedo gear and hub cover. Speedo gear is new and never been in service. How much gap is expected?But is it rubbing on the casing due to the distortion? Also, the case distortion can cause the ring gear to bind.
![]()
Shim on speedometer drive?
I have assembled the wheel, all new parts, bearings in the proper place. I am using one Dons 1 piece axle. When I fit the speedometer drive to the wheel, there is a chaffing that I can hear. Its not terrible but I dont think there should be ANY contact with the Hub-Cover. I can see some...www.accessnorton.com
(Apparently, I'm not the only one to describe the centre as bowed or "bulged out").
Speedo gear is new and never been in service. How much gap is expected?
Not sure what well clear is and I will measure to make sure gear is not bowed out.
The one I took apart yesterday ate completely through the cover and was lightly touching the hub itself. It was bowed more than others I've seen. It still was working OK but between bad bearings and that rubbing, it made a terrible noise when turning.In the linked thread above Dyno Dave on last post of thread states the soft potmetal of the drive housing is being extruded when axle is torqued too much (like the spec'd 80 ft-lbs I bet), which causes the bowing and hub cover contact.
If running without the cover (as some do for the look), does this eliminate the problem or will drive contact hub itself?
I'm quite sure that didn't happen. I have a single axle coming Monday so I will measure the gearbox then.Before I figured out a good technique for fitting everything between the wheel hub and the right side swing arm, I caused distortion to the speedo gearbox case by levering against it while trying to fit the spindle spacer (#4 in parts diagram). If you do something like that, you can have a brand new gearbox that contacts the hub cover.
Overtightening may have happened but no way I got close to 80 ft/lbsIn the linked thread above Dyno Dave on last post of thread states the soft potmetal of the drive housing is being extruded when axle is torqued too much (like the spec'd 80 ft-lbs I bet), which causes the bowing and hub cover contact.
If running without the cover (as some do for the look), does this eliminate the problem or will drive contact hub itself?
I will need to rely on adjustables then.Btw, one slight nit pick on the one piece axle, the nut and bolt head are Metric, both 24mm. So it means we need to carry three wrench formats around if worried about roadside tire work etc. Guess cresent/adjustable wrenches are the best option there.
I found a light weight alu tire spoon in my tool box that has a 24mm hex ring on the handle end. Think I got it online from Fortnine here in Canada, but it might be a Motion Pro item.I will need to rely on adjustables then.
Partly tested:Perhaps someone with old drive casings laying around could try a torque squash test to see if any bowing occurs as DynoDave claims, and at what torque range. Then we'd have an answer we can all use.