I’ve finally got the new 4-spring cush centred clutch on the B33 and can note a few fun facts.
The 42-3170A is usually specified as a
large taper, that is, a larger diameter taper to fit further inboard on the mainshaft. This is the one to fit the 4-spring clutch on to the plunger/rigid B.
I phoned LF Harris (super helpful) who state the spec on the 42-3170A is 0.753” – 0.754” (ie 19.10mm) on the inboard (wider) side of the taper. This compared with the standard 42-3170 which is 0.739” – 0.730” (ie 18.53mm). It can be hard to measure that inboard diameter – the outboard (smaller) diameter of my standard 42-3170 measured 16.56mm.
There is also a 42-3170A (same part number!) sold as a
narrow taper and said to fit the alternator B31/b33 models and possibly some ‘later singles’. I got sent one of those. The outboard (smaller) end of the taper measured 15.96mm. This is NOT what you want for this job. It sits about 3.4mm further outboard on the mainshaft (compared to standard 42-3170).
As I ended up with 2 incorrect clutch hub adaptors, sent one at a time from 12,000 miles away, I took inspiration from Ian’s post above and the other thread referenced and widened the taper to fit. Setting the taper angle was difficult and trial and error (I don’t have a suitable dial gauge). I couldn’t usefully cut the hard steel with a carbide tool (especially with the keyway smashing the tool) so made a mount for a pencil die grinder on the tool post (inspired by Chatterly John’s post elsewhere – my pic below). After many tiny grinds, checking with blue and finally lapping with fine paste (I know some people think that’s a bad idea) it fits the m/s taper at least as well as the standard clutch adaptor fits on my a10. The clutch adaptor now sits 3.76mm further inboard than the standard 42-3170 and the chainwheel aligns with the crankshaft sprocket. The 3.76mm is less than I first thought needed and there was no problem with the adaptor hitting the shoulder on the mainshaft (tho I did take 1mm off the inboard end of the taper to be sure).
Very importantly the 4-spring clutch fits inside the tin chaincase. I added an extra spacer under 42-3237 and had to make a new key as the old one was loose. 42-3267 is blue loctited on at about 70 ft/lbs. As the hub has a cush centre I removed the standard cush spring and made a spacer (long story as why, for another thread if it ever happens) – still tighten to usual specs. And the pushrod needed to be 3/4" longer – currently in 3 sections with a 1/4" ball assisting.
The clutch is so much lighter! I stupidly put an a10 amount of primary case oil in the tincase B, which I have been doing for years on the 6-spring
. But it oiled the new plates together and graunched into first. Now cleaned and the right amount of ATF (which is not even leaking – yet).
So… the new 4-spring on the plunger is a great improvement. And make sure you get the right version of 42-3170A.