This has been discussed a bit on other threads but like I'd said earlier, I would post details as to what I found when I got home and got everything fixed.
So, A bit of history
Several years ago, I bought these levers.....and didnt have any issue from them. http://www.ebay.com/itm/251006820844?_trksid=p2055119.m1438.l2649&ssPageNa me=STRK:MEBIDX:IT
So, I few months later, really liked them, and bought some more and put them on the shelf. (I later donated them to DMAN after his wreck) I dont know if he had any issues or not.
So, this summer, I'm in a hurry (trying to get tires and wheels on the bike before I leave for Eureka Springs the next day) and I'm having an issue with the kickstand falling down due to a stretched spring. I have the bike outside, and just have it put on the lift in a hurry. I walk into the garage, and I hear a crash. The bike fell off of the lift, crushed the left rear turn signal, and breaks about 2 inches off of the clutch lever. So, I steal the rear signals off of the 86, and bend the shift lever halfway back into shape, and I can still shift with 3 fingers, so I leave the clutch lever.
After I get home, I order some new levers (from the same vendor as before). Before I had to swap over the brass piece (the swivel piece) from the stock levers, but this time, it comes with that swivel installed. I install the lever, and away I go. A short time after that, the clutch starts slipping. It has been a couple of years, so I change it out. I mic the discs, and only one is out of spec (which is odd.....but hey). So change the clutch......and in the hot Oklahoma sun, after being on the bike about an hour....it would start slipping again. It would slip in the lower gears first.
So, I bleed....etc....and its better. While I'm at it.....I also change out the clutch MC as well. I do it strictly because it looks bad. So, I change the fluid, and fill it about halfway up.....and after multiple pumps.....it feels odd. So I count the number of pumps. After about a hundred.....I couldn't get the lever to touch the handle anymore. I physically couldn't squeeze the handle that far in.....anymore. So, I bled it again, and it feels better. I go out for a ride with a friend of mine, that weekend, and after about an hour....the clutch started to slip. Even after letting the bike cool, I almost couldnt make it home.
So....lol....even at dinner with Friends....I'm searching the forums looking for an answer. The only thing that I found halfway close was a post by Donnelly where he had swapped levers, and had to take them off, because they keeping the clutch pushrod pushed in on the MC. AHAAAAA!!!!! Thats it. I swapped back on a stock lever that I had sitting on the shelf, and it was amazing......full clutch response. I rode around town, making the bike get as warm as I could, to see if there was an issue. NOPE. So.....with the clutch MC I ordered, it came with a new brass swivel, and so I grabbed the calipers, and measured the hole in the stock lever, vs aftermarket. There was a couple of MM difference.
So, the next day I'm heading back to work, and I call Sean to see what would be the easiest way to drill the whole in the brass swivel deeper.....and Sean says "Wouldn't it be easier to just grind off some on the MC pushrod"? YEP....it would....and thats why Sean is Sean.....and I am just me.
So.....fast forward....(spending time in Lafayette LA, waiting to go out to work, a Paramedic refresher course, spending over 40 days in Columbia....and having 2 days off, plus another job for 14 days.) So I get home. The levers physically look the same, and even if you lay them on top of each other.....they still match up. I grabbed the calipers again....and measured from the lip of the lever to the inside of the whole. I documented everything in the pics below. I actually took about 3 mm off of the pushrod.
Now, with the lever on "4" (I have medium size hands) the clutch starts to engage about an inch from the lever. The highest temp that its gotten here is about 60 degrees. Ive taken the bike out twice and flogged it, and couldn't make the clutch slip....although its not uncommon for an OK summer to to 45 degrees hotter.
So, I will say that its fixed, but I wont say 100% until this summer. I will say this, I was surprised at the difference in the depth of the whole of the swivel between the stock swivel, and the aftermarket. I have also squeezed the lever 150 times in a row (I counted them....not fun with a DD mod), and still get full engagement of the lever, not like before.
Hope this helps.
Eric
So, A bit of history
Several years ago, I bought these levers.....and didnt have any issue from them. http://www.ebay.com/itm/251006820844?_trksid=p2055119.m1438.l2649&ssPageNa me=STRK:MEBIDX:IT
So, I few months later, really liked them, and bought some more and put them on the shelf. (I later donated them to DMAN after his wreck) I dont know if he had any issues or not.
So, this summer, I'm in a hurry (trying to get tires and wheels on the bike before I leave for Eureka Springs the next day) and I'm having an issue with the kickstand falling down due to a stretched spring. I have the bike outside, and just have it put on the lift in a hurry. I walk into the garage, and I hear a crash. The bike fell off of the lift, crushed the left rear turn signal, and breaks about 2 inches off of the clutch lever. So, I steal the rear signals off of the 86, and bend the shift lever halfway back into shape, and I can still shift with 3 fingers, so I leave the clutch lever.
After I get home, I order some new levers (from the same vendor as before). Before I had to swap over the brass piece (the swivel piece) from the stock levers, but this time, it comes with that swivel installed. I install the lever, and away I go. A short time after that, the clutch starts slipping. It has been a couple of years, so I change it out. I mic the discs, and only one is out of spec (which is odd.....but hey). So change the clutch......and in the hot Oklahoma sun, after being on the bike about an hour....it would start slipping again. It would slip in the lower gears first.
So, I bleed....etc....and its better. While I'm at it.....I also change out the clutch MC as well. I do it strictly because it looks bad. So, I change the fluid, and fill it about halfway up.....and after multiple pumps.....it feels odd. So I count the number of pumps. After about a hundred.....I couldn't get the lever to touch the handle anymore. I physically couldn't squeeze the handle that far in.....anymore. So, I bled it again, and it feels better. I go out for a ride with a friend of mine, that weekend, and after about an hour....the clutch started to slip. Even after letting the bike cool, I almost couldnt make it home.
So....lol....even at dinner with Friends....I'm searching the forums looking for an answer. The only thing that I found halfway close was a post by Donnelly where he had swapped levers, and had to take them off, because they keeping the clutch pushrod pushed in on the MC. AHAAAAA!!!!! Thats it. I swapped back on a stock lever that I had sitting on the shelf, and it was amazing......full clutch response. I rode around town, making the bike get as warm as I could, to see if there was an issue. NOPE. So.....with the clutch MC I ordered, it came with a new brass swivel, and so I grabbed the calipers, and measured the hole in the stock lever, vs aftermarket. There was a couple of MM difference.
So, the next day I'm heading back to work, and I call Sean to see what would be the easiest way to drill the whole in the brass swivel deeper.....and Sean says "Wouldn't it be easier to just grind off some on the MC pushrod"? YEP....it would....and thats why Sean is Sean.....and I am just me.
So.....fast forward....(spending time in Lafayette LA, waiting to go out to work, a Paramedic refresher course, spending over 40 days in Columbia....and having 2 days off, plus another job for 14 days.) So I get home. The levers physically look the same, and even if you lay them on top of each other.....they still match up. I grabbed the calipers again....and measured from the lip of the lever to the inside of the whole. I documented everything in the pics below. I actually took about 3 mm off of the pushrod.
Now, with the lever on "4" (I have medium size hands) the clutch starts to engage about an inch from the lever. The highest temp that its gotten here is about 60 degrees. Ive taken the bike out twice and flogged it, and couldn't make the clutch slip....although its not uncommon for an OK summer to to 45 degrees hotter.
So, I will say that its fixed, but I wont say 100% until this summer. I will say this, I was surprised at the difference in the depth of the whole of the swivel between the stock swivel, and the aftermarket. I have also squeezed the lever 150 times in a row (I counted them....not fun with a DD mod), and still get full engagement of the lever, not like before.
Hope this helps.
Eric
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