

The first problem I had assembling the gearbox was that the primary shaft (Table 8,#54) was not the correct one! I sent this one off to Jerry Kimberlin who very generously machined it down to the correct specs including welding on the tang at the end. Here are the correct dimensions in case anyone needs to recreate a shaft.
The trueness of the shaft needs to be checked on V blocks and cannot have a radial runout greater than 0.05mm.The second problem was the bush inside the shaft (Table 8, #59) was not the right size and had to be remachined which again, Jerry did. Here are the dimensions if anyone wants to make one out of 660 bronze. I have also shown the dimensions of the ring that sits in between the direct gear and the bearing. This is a critical dimension and needs to be set for each individual gearbox (more on this later). The spacer ring (Table 8,#55) is assembled with the flat side against the bearing as shown in the photo below.

Assembling the gearbox:
All the assembly is done on the LH side of the crankcase. I assembled it without the crankshaft as you have to open and close the cases several times to check if the spacer ring behind the direct gear is the right fit. I first inserted the clutch hub (Table 7 #10) from the outside into the LH side upper bearing. As specified by the manual, I made sure to support the inner race with a short tube while tapping the hub into the bearing. I then inserted into the hub, the tapered end of the mainshaft with the flat side of the spacer ring facing the bearing. After tightening the nut on the outside of the clutch hub, I rechecked the alignment of the mainshaft (max run-out is 0.05mm) and made sure there was no lateral movement between the shaft, the hub and the bearing. I next assembled the gear selector quadrant making sure that the "4" punched in the casting matched the "4" marked on the tooth arc. Next to go in was the secondary shaft with the large gear closest to the LH casting. There are two spacer rings that go on either end of the shaft-the thinnest (15.2 mm ID x 22mm OD x 1.2mm thick) one goes on the side closest to the direct gear (RH) while the thicker one (15.2 mm ID x 22mm OD x 2.3mm thick) goes on the clutch side (LH).
Now, to assemble the shift drum. The gearbox is assembled in 4th gear. The shifter was properly lock wired and ready for assembly. I rotated the 4th gear shifter (the one opposite end to the gear side of the drum - RH side in the photos) close to the top of the slot in the drum. I then rotated the drum till the lower shifter (LH in the photos used for 1st and 2nd gear) aligned with the first and slid the twin first and second gears into the LH lower clevis fork and the single gear into the upper RH clevis fork. It is easier to rotate the drum with the stationary part of the cylinder clamped in soft vice jaws. The whole assembly then drops into the LH case with the bottom gear teeth mating with the teeth on the shift quadrant.
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ReplyDeleteHi I have a part missing from my gearbox. Its the pressure support washer no 55 shown in one of the photos probably phossfur bronze?
ReplyDeleteI would like to buy one or does anybody have the diementions and I can make one?
Any help much appriciated.
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