Hi all, advice please. I have not ridden my 1960 Dominator 99 for a couple of months but have started her regularly. I was going for a ride today but the clutch would not work. Is it common for the clutch plates to stick together if not used please?
Thankyou
Hi Tony, My normal starting…
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Thankyou George, I will try…
Thankyou George, I will try this, I have not been doing it.
thankyou
Tony
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Clutches can stick in…
Clutches can stick in almost any vehicle . Sometimes putting in gear holding the clutch in (or down) and rocking the bike/car backwards and forwards against the compression will free it. Worked well with 3 tons of Mercedes,
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Thankyou Robert Tony
Thankyou Robert
Tony
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It is likely that there is…
It is likely that there is oil on the plates, either from the primary chain lubricant or most likely from the gearbox, via the clutch push rod.
Best option is to dismantle the clutch and clean the plates off so the clutch no longer sticks. After that, during normal use, free the clutch often, even when not starting the bike. I free my 99 Dommi clutch every few days and never have the sticking clutch problem return.....
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Thankyou Edward, really…
Thankyou Edward, really appreciate the info.
Tony
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Thankyou so much Edward Tony
Thankyou so much Edward
Tony
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Some owners keep a rubber…
Some owners keep a rubber band or similar around the clutch lever when in store. It depresses the springs a bit...but they are already under pressure anyway so the small extra movement probably makes no difference.
Like others, I sometimes find I need to kick it over with clutch lever pulled in. It's always worked for me.
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Dross reply
Could also be the engine oil seal allowing oil into the chain case.I had to fit a new one last year and solved the problem. As stated above also applies.
I would take out the level plug and see how much oil comes out.
Drag and slip are typical symptoms, but run the engine a while to spin the oil off the plates.
Otherwise, wash the plates in petrol. E10 is perfect for this.
Good luck..
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Thankyou Neil
Thankyou Neil
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Hi Tony,
My normal starting procedure, prior to actually kicking it to start, is to pull in the clutch and kick it over to free the clutch off. Was the way I was taught too many years ago.
Have/do you do this?
Works for me on my 650, and as far as I can remember was a normal part of the starting ritual for most Brit bikes.
Regards,
George