Thank you, Greg.Assuming no bad parts, you still aren't getting the clutch pushrod adjusted right or the cable is not properly in the actuator. Unlike some other British bikes, the actuator can slip out of place if the adjustment is too loose. Look in the inspection hole of the gearbox. The cable end should be in the actuator and clearly visible. With the cable slacken at the handlebar, the actuator should have only slight up and down movement. If it does, loosen the clutch adjuster screw about a turn and see if the actuator stays in place but has a little more movement. There really is no way for the symptoms you have to exist if the parts are good and the actuator is in place.
The clutch actuator may well be misaligned if that lock ring was loose but that should only cause hard clutch pulling, not your symptom. If it were very loose, then the rod and actualtor would not in their proper places.
We need a picture in the gearbox inspection hole, and in the outer chaincase inspection hole where you adjust the clutch rod.
Also, many here hate the tab washer becuase the nut can come loose. That only happens if you're missing the steel washer that goes between the tab washer and nut - number 58:
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Read here for my (and others) thoughts on tightening the nut (57) under the Primary Case heading - you're now WAY too tight: https://gregmarsh.com/MC/Norton/Info/NortonTorque.aspx
No, but I don't think it is cable related, but anything is possible.Did you have this problem before you changed your clutch cable?
Clutch plates are sintered bronze that I presume to be OEM. A pretty copper color. I put them back in the same order they came out. Clutch action was consistent before the gear box overhaul. Clutch spring circlip 06-0751 is seated properly.What clutch plates are you using, stack height right, pressure plate lost its grip maybe, the big C clip sitting fully in its grove for the pressure plate, clutch plates in the right position.
Here is what I just found this morning.... All washers in their correct place, two tabs used. Loose as a goose and threads away from disaster.Clutch to main shaft nut re-torqued to 70 ft lbs, now using two tabs of the 3 on the tab washer. I did this 2 days ago after finding it loose and thought this was my problem, however, the symptoms persist. Previously I had torqued it to 40 pounds as per Ashley the AN engineer in one of his videos. It was only saved by the single tab on the tab washer
I knew something was changing mid-ride, I was just convinced that I had taken care of the clutch fixing nut. Therefore, I was deeply puzzled and felt strongly that my problem lay with the gear box and clutch operating lever. Overnight, I decided that it was not as simple as getting the adjustment correct.1) either the pushrod got shorter which is impossible
Above is Greg's thoughts from last night, which moved me in the right direction. Finding the nut loose again this morning, I knew I had done something wrong, and it occurred to me that when I use the clutch tool, I had the bolt threaded into the hub of the spring WAY beyond what was needed. I guess you could call it a paranoid reaction to the cheap Triumph clutch pullers sold nowadays. I wanted to be certain that I wasn't stripping threads. Yeah, I know,That nut is not just coming loose - something is helping it. Before the tab washer there was just a spring washer. There is no tendency for either to come loose. The clutch center/mainshaft are turning "into" the nut. You nut was unscrewing hard enough to open the tabs. The job of the tabs is not to keep the nut tight - it should stay tight - it's to stop bad things from happening if the nut comes loose. Your nut has come WAY loose.
Look at the inside of the diaphragm spring to see if it is somehow contacting the clutch center nut. Tell us how many plain and friction plates you have - it appears you are short one.
Things to check but probably not the problem:
Take it apart and check the hub bearing.
The mainshaft, once the clutch is off should have no end float as it is locked in place by the bearing/retainer/nut on the timing side.
Yes, the clutch spring compressor tool. Instead of having it run in smartly just to the end of the spring's hub threading, I had it turned in several threads past. That is probably why they include a stop nut to prevent what I believe was happening. I have no proof to offer that the tool's bolt was turning my clutch nut loose, just that I made the change to how much bolt was exposed through the hub of the spring to just a thread or so, and my clutch now works as designed and a 50 mile ride proved it.Jones,
Glad you got your problem solved. I keep reading your final post and cannot figure out what tool was giving you grief.Is it a clutch spring compressor?
Thanks,Mike
200cc of automatic transmission fluid is what I use in the primary. I was also running ATF prior to the gear box rebuild when the clutch was holding its adjustment. I washed the plates prior to reassembly after the gear box overhaul. If you read the entire post, you will see that I found the clutch fixing nut, part number 04-0373, loose two times while experiencing the problems.Hi,
Surely it’s got to be oil on the clutch plates. Especially since it was working well then suddenly it became sticky. How much and what type of oil are you using in the primary. Is the main seal on the crankshaft leaking or displaced flooding the primary. My advice is to disassemble the clutch, wash in solvent and reassemble and see how it goes. I doubt you are doing anything wrong in adjustment, it’s very simple. I hope this helps. Alan
Jones,Yes, the clutch spring compressor tool. Instead of having it run in smartly just to the end of the spring's hub threading, I had it turned in several threads past. That is probably why they include a stop nut to prevent what I believe was happening. I have no proof to offer that the tool's bolt was turning my clutch nut loose, just that I made the change to how much bolt was exposed through the hub of the spring to just a thread or so, and my clutch now works as designed and a 50 mile ride proved it.
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Ying, thanks, and I will indeed will be setting mine up just as you show here next time I use it. The more I think about it, the more I believe it was the cause of my clutch fixing nut coming loose.Jones,
I have been using my clutch tool in a different position as your picture for years. I run the center bolt in just enough to grab all the threads of the spring and then lock that position with the inner nut and proceed to use the outer nut while holding the bolt of the tool stationary.That way everything stays in place.I could be wrong with this but it has worked for me
Mike View attachment 119533