Even so, clutch would not engage (when in first gear with clutch pulled in couldn't push bike).
So, I wound screws in a few turns and set up to lift square again but the clutch will still not engage (same trouble, can't push it in gear with clutch pulled in).
Terry,
If this just turns out to be a language thing, I apologize, but this is how I've read your post: You are thinking (or, at least, saying) that the clutch is "engaging" when the lever is pulled in. In fact the clutch is disengaging. This word mix-up might mean nothing, except you say you wound the screws (nuts) in while attempting to improve actual disengagement, which is opposite to your intention. However, tightening the nuts should not affect the clutch's ability to disengage, as long as operating the lever does not bottom the springs. What you would get, barring other problems, is a much stiffer lever and a jumpy clutch action.
Here are some possibilities I don?t believe have been mentioned:
1) Your pushrod is too short (nothing personal). This can be fixed by cutting the rod in two and running a ¼? ball bearing into the tunnel to sit between the two halves, as is mine. You might need to trim one of the halves if too much length is added.
2) The adjusting screw on the actuating lever needs to be, as they say, adjusted.
3) Position on the splines was, indeed, mentioned, but the possibility of said position allowing the ball end of the adjusting screw to fall off the end of the pushrod should be checked.
4) When I bushed the clutch arm on mine, the alignment in the bore was not perfect and I was concerned that looseness of the pushrod in the tunnel would allow the rod to move away from the pusher ball. I used my Dremel grinder to create a depression in the rod end to assure contact was maintained. (Though, I?ve no doubt Groily probably did a better bush job than job than I, even though he is in France and not Oz.)
5) The ball is gone off the end of the adjusting screw.
6) As mentioned above, the springs are bottoming on lever action because they are too tight.
Well, that?s a lot of palaver. Please keep us informed as to progress.
Richard L.