ref. Kiwi's comment "I use a dial guage to make sure the pressure plates lift evenly, tedious but it makes a difference, as does having the minimum spring tension that does not allow clutch slip." - when I assemble my 6 spring, I wont have the bike anywhere near complete but I'd like to set it up this way. …
So whats the rule of thumb for the initial setting of the nuts preferencing light operation and then how do you disengage it (and hold it there) while spinning it against a dial gauge and trimming the tensions, without a clutch cable???
cheers,
I do the job using the clutch lever, just pull it fully back to the handlebar and measure the plate movement at 4 points at 90deg.
To start, measure the plate movement (near its edge) then Turn the pressure plate 180 degrees a (Note pull the clutch lever in and turn the clutch/plate by hand so you dont turn the gearbox mainshaft, as that could be bent) and measure again. Tighten the applicable nuts on the side moving more, repeat until the movement at 180 deg is equal.
Then turn the pressure plate 90deg and Repeat.
I position the dial guage mid way between two springs, then rotate it 180 deg to be between the opposite two springs, which means you adjust 2 springs to make it lift evenly.
When you turn the pressure plate 90 deg to adjust the other plane the dial guage will be directly opposite one spring, so you only need to adjust one spring to get it to lift equally.
The correct starting spring tension is a judgement thing, if you can fairly easily pull the clutch lever in you are in the ball park. I can just about tighten the adjustment nut Using fingers not a spanner when its right. If all your springs are equal length you can tighten one and then make the others match eg same number of threads showing.
Note I measure the pressure plate movement (in region of 2 to 3 mm) which is different to getting the plate to rotate flat when the clutch is disengaged, the pressure plates tend to “wobble” when the clutch is engaged so adjusting it so it lifts into a “flat” position does not definitely result in an equal plate movement at the 4 measurement points.
All This will become clearer when you do the job .....maybe.