Last week, along with other planned maintenance jobs, I removed and checked my 1960 Golden Flash's 6-spring clutch plates, refitted them and adjusted the clutch. It took a couple of hours to adjust the clutch to my satisfaction and afterwards I made notes of the sequence I followed to aid me at another time.
I anybody wants to read through it and can see anything I've missed or done wrong I'd be only too happy for them to point it out.
6-spring clutch routine maintenance:-
1. Slacken off the handlebar lever and the gearbox actuating arm adjuster.
2. After removing the pressure plate remove and inspect all plates and file off any wear burrs on the metal driven plates.
3. Pull out and inspect the pushrod and refit if ok.
4. Refit the clutch plates, metal driven plate first followed alternatively by friction and driven.
5. Fit the pressure plate after putting a blob of grease on pushrod bearing inside.
6. Fit spring cups followed by springs (new are 28mm long).
7. Mark a dot on edge of ends of studs to be able to notice if any rotate while tightening the nuts.
8. Screw on nuts so that they are just touching the springs.
9. Mark each nut with a dot to correspond to the dot on its stud to aid counting turns.
10. Tighten nuts alternating from one side to the other for 6 complete turns.
11. Mark numbers 1 to 4 on pressure plate at 12, 3, 6, & 9 o’clock.
12. Pull and tie the handlebar clutch lever in fully with a rope using a clove hitch.
13. Using a bent wire with one end wedged with a matchstick in a convenient bolt hole in the case, arrange the other end so that it just touches the outside edge of the pressure plate.
14. Remove spark plugs and select 4th gear.
15. Rotate the back wheel while watching the relationship between the end of the wire gauge and the pressure plate as it rotates.
16. Note any run-out discrepancies by referring to the numbers marked on the pressure plate and adjust.
17. Either screw in or out the nut near the run-out and do the opposite to the nut opposite it as required. This reduces run-out whilst keeping the pressure constant.
18. Keep doing this until the pressure plate is running true to the gauge all the way around its circumference.
19. Fit and tighten the lock nuts.
20. Release the handlebar clutch lever.
21. Ensure the clutch cable is slack and adjust the actuating arm on the gearbox by the adjuster inside the oval cover on the gearbox cover so that when the clutch is engaged (i.e. handlebar lever not pulled in) there is a little free play between the ball bearing embedded within the adjuster and the end of the pushrod.
22. Adjust the cable so that there is 1/8” of free play at the handlebar lever.
NOTE:-
If the adjuster’s lock nut and the actuating arm are positioned correctly on the mechanisms spline so they are in line with each other (parallel) then the lever will be parallel to the joint on the gearbox cover and more importantly the adjuster will be at a right angle to the pushrod when the handlebar lever is pulled in to disengage the clutch and there will be minimum side thrust imposed on the end of the pushrod and the ball bearing in the adjuster.
If the actuating arm and the adjuster are not dead in line on the spline, either slightly too much or slightly too little either way, the alignment of the actuating arm to the gearbox cover joint will be correspondingly different when the handlebar lever is pulled in and the clutch is disengaged.
My Golden Flash’s actuating arm is fitted on the spline incorrectly so it angles slightly more in towards the cover joint than the adjuster’s lock nut (so not parallel with it), which means that with the handlebar lever pulled in and the clutch disengaged it will be less than 90 degrees to the gearbox cover joint. However, the adjuster itself can be adjusted to be at a right angle to the pushrod and will therefore be in the correct position to apply force squarely to the end of the pushrod.
Amen!