Revisit the Clutch Stack

swooshdave

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Apr 2009
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Apparently it's been a while, six years?, since I looked at the clutch. The result of all of that work was... nothing.

Time to go at it again. Recently (in the last six years) the club had some thinner clutch plates made by one of the members, since you can't get them from Old Britts anymore. So I'm going to see if I can finally get the stack height right.

Revisit the Clutch Stack
 
Well, I reread my old thread and aside from annoying @dynodave I'm not sure much got accomplished. :p

But there were some tips I'm going to try again.

And as a last resort I can take the clutch stack from my 750 (which I think has the 850 pressure plate, but I honestly can't remember and for some reason I can't find a picture of it disassembled.) and see how it performs on the 850.
 
Well, we have a smoking gun now. And no wonder that messing with the clutch stack height made no perceivable change.

I finally swapped the clutch from the 750 (which was indeed a 750 pressure plate) to the 850 and the easy pull came with it. But then I had an epiphany to just swap the diaphragm springs. And that was it. The 850 spring is the culprit. It's significantly heavier than the one that had been on the 750.

So spring differences can make a... difference. So now the 750 diaphragm is on the 850 clutch stack. And it's a light pull. Once I have the bike back together I'll see if the clutch slips or if it's fine.

And I may try to source another spring and see what that's like.
 
I wonder if people have ever tested a sample size of the springs for their rates? What would a test rig look like?
I think BDM (Mr Leadbeater) had done it ...but I had lost somewhere in my computer all his list !
 
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