nomadwarmachine Nov 6, 2019 #21 maylar said: A small sanding drum or grinding stone in a Dremel will relieve the epoxy around the stator mounts. I had to do that with my e-start install. Click to expand... That is exactly what I had in mind. Did you sand down the epoxy or the mount?
maylar said: A small sanding drum or grinding stone in a Dremel will relieve the epoxy around the stator mounts. I had to do that with my e-start install. Click to expand... That is exactly what I had in mind. Did you sand down the epoxy or the mount?
maylar VIP MEMBER Nov 6, 2019 #22 nomadwarmachine said: That is exactly what I had in mind. Did you sand down the epoxy or the mount? Click to expand... The epoxy. It's quite soft actually (mine is a Sparx stator). I found a drum that was exactly the right size in my Dremel stuff.
nomadwarmachine said: That is exactly what I had in mind. Did you sand down the epoxy or the mount? Click to expand... The epoxy. It's quite soft actually (mine is a Sparx stator). I found a drum that was exactly the right size in my Dremel stuff.
nomadwarmachine Nov 6, 2019 #23 maylar said: The epoxy. It's quite soft actually (mine is a Sparx stator). I found a drum that was exactly the right size in my Dremel stuff. Click to expand... That makes sense. Looks like a fraction of an inch in order to get the stator to slide over the stud casting. Will have a go at it tonight.
maylar said: The epoxy. It's quite soft actually (mine is a Sparx stator). I found a drum that was exactly the right size in my Dremel stuff. Click to expand... That makes sense. Looks like a fraction of an inch in order to get the stator to slide over the stud casting. Will have a go at it tonight.