Hi chaps,
Yes, I've got the plates in the right order, and the kickstart cotter pin isn't the wrong way round, even the Haynes manual and BSA parts list show it fitted like that, so...
I didn't replace the roller bearings but don't remember what size they were, didn't bother measuring them. I think I'd have had a problem before now if they were wrong.
On the Haynes manual stuff, that book really is a mixed blessing isn't it. I've got an old secondhand one and it's full of owner added information about left hand threads where it says right hand (and vice versa), and the gears being wrongly numbered. It doesn't even mention the four spring clutch in mine, despite having the drawing from the parts list illustrating it as an alternative (and the drawing shows the correct number of plates but the text doesn't correspond). The photos on the engine rebuild bit only show the six spring. I've used the drawings in the BSA parts list (supposedly for my year of bike) as the main guiding force for what's needed and what goes where. And Roy Bacon's book has been helpful as well as the Gold Portfolio A7/A10 book (when you have no history of having these bikes in your youth you have to start somewhere!)
I'm still under the weather so haven't done anything else to bike yet. Don't worry Groily, I'm sure it's nothing to do with your repair job, it must be something snagging in the clutch drum and an adjustment issue, probably the lifting square thing. I actually felt a lot happier when I finally got the clutch to lift. I just didn't know what I was doing wrong and was concerned that something serious had gone wrong like a sheared off gearbox mainshaft or something. Turned out I wasn't doing anything wrong, I was just expecting the clutch to lift where it should have done with the adjuster screw heads closer to the bolt ends.
When I did finally get the clutch to lift/disengage/work? I was having to adjust each spring tension a real knat's cock of an increment, none of this 1/4 turn business. Maybe when I left it in that persons yard for a few days after it broke down, he installed a Velocette clutch for a laugh...
Cheers,
Terry