Hi, I am assembling a 350 and the layshaft bush was missing so I don't have a sample .I have received a new one which has spiral oil groves in its bore and 4 oil slots on its face.
The alloy crankcase has a diagonal hole drilling and I wonder if I have to continue and drill through the bush after assembly ? if anyone can help I would really appreciate it!
Regards
Philip
I may be mis remembering but…
I may be mis remembering but I thought my bush was pinned from the front there being a semi circular cut out on the thrust face?
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Ok , I machined a grove on…
Ok , I machined a grove on the outside of the bush which aligns with the crankcase oil hole and then drilled through to the inner of the bush, Heated the crankcase and assembled the bush.
I fed oil through the crankcase oil drip hole and it arrived inside the bush so that I recon will do the job
Philip
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Yes it probably was not…
Yes it probably was not necessary as the bush was a good tight fit in the casing.
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Phillip, it is always best…
Phillip, it is always best to pin the bush - if the gearbox oil level drops it is prone to snatching and spinning in the housing, which can quickly wreck the cases.
Dan
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I was looking through our…
I was looking through our website and I found that there is a very interesting Lightweight Twin Compendium which answers a lot of questions.
Many thanks to all for your advice
Philip
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Hi Philip.
You will have to drill the hole through the bush. The lack of a reply so far probably means no-one has done this. I haven't either.
I'm assuming you want to do it yourself. Perhaps a job for someone who understands the difficulties.
The hole diameter is 3/32 ins. A drill of this size gripped in a pin chuck is suggested.
Your crankcase drive side must be stand-alone. The hole is drilled while the drive side crankcase is assembled, and before it is attached to it's partner timing side. The bush is pressed home into the crankcase half.
You won't have access for a standard drill/screwdriver because of the lack of access. You need a pin chuck with generous shaft length.
The bush can be drilled with a hand drill on the pin chuck. The bush material is relatively soft. The drill is located by the hole in the aluminium bush housing.
My second recommendation is to take your time and don't push hard on the drill. It could break off.
Let's see if some recommendations come from someone who has done this.
Couple of photos of a drilled bush. Of course this hole was drilled after the bush was pressed into the drive side crankase, as described above.
Peter