- Joined
- Feb 12, 2013
- Messages
- 1,563
so whats the answer to the problem of the oil seal in the timing cover shitting itself. Has anyone had the problem and how did they know they had a problem.
Dereck
Dereck
JimNH said:If you're talking about the crank seal I think an oil pressure gauge will show it; that's the reason I have one now. I think I blew it out on a cold night when I didn't warm it up.
kerinorton said:Thanks for that Jim. I suppose if your stainless hoses are all mounted securely so they cant rub, then that a would be ideal. I do personally like the thin original type oil lines and the clean look they present around the head area.
Dereck
kerinorton said:Thanks for that Jim. I suppose if your stainless hoses are all mounted securely so they cant rub, then that a would be ideal. I do personally like the thin original type oil lines and the clean look they present around the head area.
Dereck
JimNH said:Dereck,
I never had the original as I bought the bike as a rolling basket case many years ago and the line was missing. I like the stainless look anyway.
Jim's method of drilling the spindles would eliminate the overhead line which seems to the source of trouble. I wonder how difficult that is?
Jim
Brooking 850 said:Do you need to drill a small hole between the spindle end machined castings in the head where the spindles fit and why only the inlet spindles?
I have seen a fit up where the banjo's were fitted directly into the cover plates that keep your spindles in the head, and a a hose looped between all four.
Will get a pick next time I see that bike.
Regards Mike
needing said:comnoz said:The inlet spindles end close together in a common bore. No drilling on the head is needed. You just need to drill the passage in the spindle on through the ends -only on the inlet spindles. The feed from one side will then feed all four spindles. Jim
This does not provide an improvement to function but may 'look nice'.
The original system provides 'cool' oil to each of the rocker spindles from an equal distance.
Worst case:
A single inlet spindle entry means that the oil is heating as it progresses through the other inlet spindle, through the head gallery until it arrives at exhaust rocker spindle diagonal to the oil inlet spindle. This is the one now most likely to fail through overheating
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needing said:comnoz said:It looks to me like the left side is farther away than the right side. It has to travel all the way over the head through the overhead line. Drilling the spindle ends makes it closer -actually.
Not that it makes any difference.....Jim
Perhaps I haven't explained myself re your routing. Please compare this picture to the previous.
The mod now routes the oil entirely through the head so the LH exhaust spindle is feed 'much hotter' oil than the others and is therefore disadvantaged. Why / How is this an 'improvement'?
"...Not that it makes any difference..." so why bother?
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