hppants
Well-known member
In case you haven’t heard about Isabella, the FJR used by fellow member Patriot, please refer to this thread:
https://www.fjrforum.com/forum//index.php/topic/150618-running-bad-feeling-blessedlimped-home-walking-on-air/
The rest of us recall that I volunteered to take the grenaded motor apart to learn more about what happened to it. All parts from this motor will be gladly given to any forum member for only the cost of shipping. A separate thread will be started on that after the motor is apart.
A little background on this engine:
Patriot tells me that this bike is an ’04 with 169K miles at the time of motor failure. However, this is not the first motor in the bike. This motor was installed about 75K miles ago, and had 20K miles on it when installed (95K miles total). About 20K miles ago, the cylinder head was re-built because of a burnt #4 exhaust valve. Seems he crushed the #4 exhaust pipe and rode with it like that for about 15K.
The motorcycle mechanic that worked on Patriot’s bike diagnosed a bad #3 rod bearing.
April 13, 2013
I got started on the disassembly today.
I’m just about to split the cases.
I’m amazed at how stout this motor is built. Check out the size of the output shaft gears
Also worth mentioning is how little wear this engine is showing. The camshafts have no wear on the lobes
You can still see most of the hone marks on the cylinders for a motor with almost 100K on it.
Looks like the clutch basket could go forever – Patriot tells me that the clutch is original. Also, the clutch plates (metal) had zero burn marks on them and were completely flat. Back in my dirt bike days, we would have re-used these plates no questions asked. The clutch friction disks were getting pretty thin, but still had some life left in it.
The cam chain was very tight and the adjuster had well over ½ of it’s travel left. The adjuster on Patriot’s bike had the “blue dot” on it. I think that is a good sign?
I have a couple questions for the mechanics among us.
1. Which direction does the rotor nut (pictured below) loosen (clockwise or counterclockwise)? I put 125 psi on my impact wrench on that baby and it won’t budge. Any thoughts?
2. As you can see, I've removed the clutch pressure plate and friction disks. Does the clutch basket just pull out? I can wiggle it a tad, but it won't ride all the way out of the splined shaft.
I'm enjoying this experience and opportunity to learn more about our bikes. More later….
https://www.fjrforum.com/forum//index.php/topic/150618-running-bad-feeling-blessedlimped-home-walking-on-air/
The rest of us recall that I volunteered to take the grenaded motor apart to learn more about what happened to it. All parts from this motor will be gladly given to any forum member for only the cost of shipping. A separate thread will be started on that after the motor is apart.
A little background on this engine:
Patriot tells me that this bike is an ’04 with 169K miles at the time of motor failure. However, this is not the first motor in the bike. This motor was installed about 75K miles ago, and had 20K miles on it when installed (95K miles total). About 20K miles ago, the cylinder head was re-built because of a burnt #4 exhaust valve. Seems he crushed the #4 exhaust pipe and rode with it like that for about 15K.
The motorcycle mechanic that worked on Patriot’s bike diagnosed a bad #3 rod bearing.
April 13, 2013
I got started on the disassembly today.
I’m just about to split the cases.
I’m amazed at how stout this motor is built. Check out the size of the output shaft gears
Also worth mentioning is how little wear this engine is showing. The camshafts have no wear on the lobes
You can still see most of the hone marks on the cylinders for a motor with almost 100K on it.
Looks like the clutch basket could go forever – Patriot tells me that the clutch is original. Also, the clutch plates (metal) had zero burn marks on them and were completely flat. Back in my dirt bike days, we would have re-used these plates no questions asked. The clutch friction disks were getting pretty thin, but still had some life left in it.
The cam chain was very tight and the adjuster had well over ½ of it’s travel left. The adjuster on Patriot’s bike had the “blue dot” on it. I think that is a good sign?
I have a couple questions for the mechanics among us.
1. Which direction does the rotor nut (pictured below) loosen (clockwise or counterclockwise)? I put 125 psi on my impact wrench on that baby and it won’t budge. Any thoughts?
2. As you can see, I've removed the clutch pressure plate and friction disks. Does the clutch basket just pull out? I can wiggle it a tad, but it won't ride all the way out of the splined shaft.
I'm enjoying this experience and opportunity to learn more about our bikes. More later….