Your observations are very similar to mine....stock '74 850 with no check valve or OPRV mods....gauge tapped off head feed banjo...hot idle is 0-5psi and then roughly 10psi per 1-1.5k rpm...AFAIK, this is normal for the hot oil to thin down...keep in mind the motor is more concerned with actual oil flow rate rather than psi pressure. I did find using BelRay 4T 20-50 Full Synthetic, which tested very highly in the Comnoz oil studies, did improve hot idle psi a fair bit and less variation across all temps compared with VR1 Racing 20/50 and Castrol Classic 20/50 (bvoth high zinc mineral oils). Would have stuck with Belray but it is now hard to source here and the Castrol Classic can be had locally.oh yeah, oil pressure taken off of timing side exhaust rocker plate, and if bike is allowed to cool off for a period (i.e. stopping for tasty bevvies or gas) the pressure cycle starts over, high to low
My timing cover was chromed by a DPO...as was the primary case. I've found it near impossible to stop weeps of ATF out the primary case inspection caps, even with new rubber o-rings and products like Hylomar or teflon tape on the cap threads. I put this down to the chrome in the threads making for poor fitting caps. I'm now wondering if similar issue on my OPRV thread hole in the TC....though no outward leaks noted, it could be permitting oil to bypass the pressure relief mechanism.Dennis, Loctite 569. Mainly on bottom few threads. Some oil was going around the relief via the threads rather than all the oil trying to open the relief. Probably no reason for the relief body to ever be removed, but 569 is not too strong. Graham
I am using the finest Walmart 20-50 Dino money can buy to run it in since it’s only going 500 miles before a change. Maybe after some fresh royal purple it’ll go up some.Your observations are very similar to mine....stock '74 850 with no check valve or OPRV mods....gauge tapped off head feed banjo...hot idle is 0-5psi and then roughly 10psi per 1-1.5k rpm...AFAIK, this is normal for the hot oil to thin down...keep in mind the motor is more concerned with actual oil flow rate rather than psi pressure. I did find using BelRay 4T 20-50 Full Synthetic, which tested very highly in the Comnoz oil studies, did improve hot idle psi a fair bit and less variation across all temps compared with VR1 Racing 20/50 and Castrol Classic 20/50 (bvoth high zinc mineral oils). Would have stuck with Belray but it is now hard to source here and the Castrol Classic can be had locally.
This is intriguing… I never would have thought about oil bypassing the valve via the threads, but at several psi… seems like a real possibility! One more method of attackDennis, Loctite 569. Mainly on bottom few threads. Some oil was going around the relief via the threads rather than all the oil trying to open the relief. Probably no reason for the relief body to ever be removed, but 569 is not too strong. Graham
A new AN pump will be slightly more efficient than an original one.So I’m thinking maybe i should pull the oil pump and service it? It’s the only part of the bike I haven’t futzed with so it only makes sense to try and rebuild it as outlined in the book. I don’t think AMR resurfaces the faces, just puts in the seals, right? The rest of the bike pre-resurrection was haggard and mostly destroyed, so it only makes sense that the pump is probably haggard too.
Correct, oil pressure is a proxy reading, it assumes a high oil pressure is giving the right conditions for a journal in a plain bearing for the journal to have an oil film separating it from the shells. You can't measure the oil film thickness directly so oil pressure is used instead, but pressure is not the only factor in a good oil film thickness hence why an oil that creates a good oil film is also needed.keep in mind the motor is more concerned with actual oil flow rate rather than psi pressure