Rewind to March <<
While the above saga is unfolding I get on with the engine I have.
A second cheapo workbench comes my way, but not a patch on the skip workmate, anybody do replacement tops for those?
Mag housing filled first
Fitting the bearings and seals is easy enough, if you heat it adequately the bearing should drop in. You can buy special tools as drifts for the seals but properly sized sockets and extensions are just as good.
One lesson from this is to do this indoors and buy decent circlip pliers. It took about half a dozen goes to get this in and trying to find it in the flower beds is not fun!
Next the rear hub bearing goes in
and a new race for the gear cluster bearing
then the retaining plate for the rear hub bearing.
I'd used stainless studs here for the retaining plate and for some reason on the last one as I'm torquing it up it shears. So I strip the rest off and there's enough to get the mole grips on and get it out. Lucky it went at the bottom of the top thread and not next to the casing. I can only conclude here that the stainless studs are less tolerant of over torquing compared to normal ones or more brittle as the torque on these isn't high. I'm very careful now with stainless studs and generally will avoid them for things that need to be real tight. There's also the usual concerns over stainless in alloy so if I do use them I use coppa-slip on the part going in the casing.
The drive side bearing goes in next, it's a half shielded bearing, I've removed the seal from one side already. I've also already added these cutouts which allow you to remove the bearing without hitting the inner race, they're a little scruffy on this case but functional as first time I did this I put the bearing in the wrong way round with the seal facing the chain case and had to knock it out again, doh!
The layshaft goes back in next with a new sliding dog and pawls on the wishbone. You can knock this in gently but there's no substitute for pulling it in and torquing it properly. At this time I don't have a hub as it's at the powder coater, nor do I have a spacer tool.
I push on.
The drive seal plate goes on. I rate the hex screws, as long as you have a quality hex key these should give you no problems.
The crank goes in.
At this point I should maybe say where I thought I was going with this motor. My plan was to build a cast iron barrelled 225 using my original barrel with a rebore, I hadn't thought about anything else at that stage and wasn't planning on spending a fortune on this rebuild. The crank choice was a fairly standard PM Xtech race crank with 107/58 stroke, which I already had on the shelf.
The mag housing goes on
The front sprocket goes on. This is a 19 tooth, I'd accidentally ordered a 46 tooth MBD rear sprocket over the winter and didn't think they'd change it after 4 months so opted to try 19/46 with the GP box for 4.84 ratio.
I'd also got a Jockey's rear brake kit, this is very easy to fit and I'm hoping will improve the very poor original rear brake.
The stator goes in. Note another job I'd done over the winter was to convert the original AF Ducati electonic stator to give me the option to run it with the Wassel type conversion (extra yellow wire on the bottom coil)
I'd also converted the orginal GP gear arm shifter to have a stud rather than the fiddly circlip arrangement
This gets us to mid April and a change of thinking on the top end.
"Our dilemma is that we hate change and love it at the same time; what we really want is for things to remain the same but get better."