Flywheel threads had it !!
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Helping a mate set his timing and the threads are knackered on the boss......any tips or alternatives for removing the flywheel ? Only option i think of is welding a nut on the boss and running a bolt through....
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there was comment on LCGB, I think, a few years ago, about a bloke with a similar problem.
He undid the flywheel nut and then started the engine and revs it up and down fairly brutally.
Anyway, to cut a long story short, the said flywheel did eventually part company with said taper........
However, in view of the "stored" energy in said flywheel, it took off across the floor of his garage; punched a hole in the wall; and ended up across the road in his neighbours garden, having first tore its way through the neighbours wooden fence........
Glad it wasn't leaving time at the local primary school!
Perhaps not the best way to seperate flywheel from taper
Chris
He undid the flywheel nut and then started the engine and revs it up and down fairly brutally.

Anyway, to cut a long story short, the said flywheel did eventually part company with said taper........
However, in view of the "stored" energy in said flywheel, it took off across the floor of his garage; punched a hole in the wall; and ended up across the road in his neighbours garden, having first tore its way through the neighbours wooden fence........
Glad it wasn't leaving time at the local primary school!
Perhaps not the best way to seperate flywheel from taper

Chris
Scootering since 1968.
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Back in 1971 my TV175 started misfiring so when I got home I took the side panel of and gave it a fistful. I didn't have and cowlings on or rear runners so when the flywheel shot of the crank and landed on my toe spinning at about 5,000 RPM I was a little surprisedbristolmod wrote:there was comment on LCGB, I think, a few years ago, about a bloke with a similar problem.
He undid the flywheel nut and then started the engine and revs it up and down fairly brutally.![]()
Anyway, to cut a long story short, the said flywheel did eventually part company with said taper........
However, in view of the "stored" energy in said flywheel, it took off across the floor of his garage; punched a hole in the wall; and ended up across the road in his neighbours garden, having first tore its way through the neighbours wooden fence........



BTW, welding the nut on gets my vote if a better puller doesn't work.
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thats the story! when I first read it some years back I nearly shat meself with laughter!!coaster wrote:Back in 1971 my TV175 started misfiring so when I got home I took the side panel of and gave it a fistful. I didn't have and cowlings on or rear runners so when the flywheel shot of the crank and landed on my toe spinning at about 5,000 RPM I was a little surprisedbristolmod wrote:there was comment on LCGB, I think, a few years ago, about a bloke with a similar problem.
He undid the flywheel nut and then started the engine and revs it up and down fairly brutally.![]()
Anyway, to cut a long story short, the said flywheel did eventually part company with said taper........
However, in view of the "stored" energy in said flywheel, it took off across the floor of his garage; punched a hole in the wall; and ended up across the road in his neighbours garden, having first tore its way through the neighbours wooden fence........
It then shot off down the drive, across the road and down the drive way of the house opposite finally smacking into the door of the garage a good 70 - 80 feet away. Felt a right tw@7 have to knock and ask if I could have my flywheel back
Not the mention the great big hole that the fins 'milled' out of the top of my boot and bruising to my toe
![]()
BTW, welding the nut on gets my vote if a better puller doesn't work.

Scootering since 1968.
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I saw Harry Barlow tack weld the puller into the flywheel boss and remove the flywheel in the normal manner. He then cut the tacks away and removed the puller. Because the puller was a long way into the boss there was still plenty of thread left on the puller so it could be used again. The boss was knackered so a replacement boss was going to be fitted. Scooter restorations sell replacement bosses.