Most of time this is the culprit.
Pic 1 shows where it is located.Yes complete motor disassembly to get at culprit.
Pic 2,3 shows the spring that holds Pawls(bearings)in cage.This is what wears or breaks and causes issues.Notice kinks in spring that is start of failure.
Pic 4(left) is a spring I removed from a seal.Wrong length but I am sure a replacement spring can be found of correct size.Only issue I have is most of these springs in seals are made a circle by screwing ends into each other.The starter clutch spring kind of looks to be made a circle by intertwining a ways.
replacing spring and cleaning up bearing surface would fix most for under a few $'s(cost of seal for spring)BUT whole assembly is about $50 new.Then again it all adds up at rebuild time.Not sure if its worth trying this fix since if it fails motor has to come apart.Let me know what you think.
One-Way bearing
When the clutch rollers start to get wear spots on them then end up rotating further when engaging. This eventually starts to kink the spring and eventually it breaks. A couple years ago I did replace the spring with one from a seal and it is still working . I highly recomend polishing up the inner hub during a rebuild to keep wear on the rollers to a minimum. Since the oil pump feeds oil directly down the countershaft when a crank fails the starter clutch should be replaced or at least fully inspected /cleaned . It will get the first dose of steel fragments from the crank failure.
-
- Posts: 0
- Joined: Wed Mar 10, 2021 10:41 pm
QUOTE
When the clutch rollers start to get wear spots on them then end up rotating further when engaging. This eventually starts to kink the spring and eventually it breaks. A couple years ago I did replace the spring with one from a seal and it is still working .
These are a conflicting statement Wistech.Not going to get away with that
![biggrin.gif](http://www.cannondaleriders.com/forums/style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/biggrin.gif)
I would really like to see a solid wire in there.Need to experiment with that.Danger would be that its likely not all rollers are actually activated everytime since they all wouldnt grip same.Might cause one to flip or something.
Oh sure they can get all worn out but they will still function fine as long as the spring is still intact to give them the slightest amount of pressure to give them the initial grip to the shaft. Once its breaks then only a few end up gripping and you get the slippage /grinding sounds . I remember having to deal with these dam things a lot on my 300ex when we got it up to 410cc's. Its almost exactly the same part.