fido If your engine number is higher than XA7 600 you should have a conventional type of crank with steel rods having detachable end caps. Bearing, bush and journal sizes are the same as later shortstroke engines.
Timing side bush has the same dimensions for all engines. Early types were a steel carrier with cast in bearing material. This bearing surface sometimes suffers fatigue cracking where the engine has been subject to heavy, sustained loading, typically a slow slog with a laden sidecar. A true 2 piece bush as you describe will not be original, and the bearing material, a thin copper/bronze coloured material should be pegged to the carrier to prevent rotation and consequent blockage of the oil holes.
An original or replacement bush has a top hat flange with two flats which locate it in the timing side case. How you proceed depends on what has happened. If the bush is a later two piece bush with the bearing material seized to the crank, but free in the carrier and the steel carrier is still in place then you are lucky. Otherwise if the whole thing has turned with the crank then there must be damage to the case, or it is a non standard cylindrical bush with no locating flats.
To rectify, in a case of damage, the cases need to be line bored to clean up the bush location, and then a custom bush made to fit. A standard bush will not fit tightly enough in the cases, if you have evidence of damage. Any gap between the bush outer and the cases will allow pressurised oil to escape, rather than being forced to the big ends. The cases require to be warmed, bush cooled, to give a good interference fit on rebuild. Then the bush line bored to give a running clearance to the crank journal. Here the crank can be ground just enough to clean up, you don't need to stick to a set size as a custom bush takes care of that. If the cases are OK, a well undersize one piece bronze bush can be installed and line bored to fit the cleaned up crank. This all depends on the final dimensions of the crank and how much material you have to play with.
The inner wall of the case may need work to restore the bush flange locating positions. Look on the forum, all this and the attention to the crank sludge trap has been dealt with in great detail, just a matter of searching.
Drive side main bearing was originally a deep groove ball race. This eliminates crank end float. Someone may have fitted a non standard unflanged bush to get the bike back on the road in the time when official spares were unobtainable.
How easy was it to get that race off the crank?
beezermac has already posted, while I was typing, so this post repeats some of his notes.
Swarfy