The French Riviera is magnificent in May she said from behind her outsized Gucci eyewear as the Lamborghinis passed outside the restaurant where a bottle of wine costs more than all the clothes on my body, but sometimes it’s not about the money. Reflections in tinted Bentley windows portraying palm tree parades leading up to The Carlton Hotel, the sun sets leisurely over the jewelry drenched haciendas as the murderer met her at the Viper Room, 5 hours left until she met her doom, blood tastes better if you had a pulse he mumbled, the ghost of River Phoenix and a bag of blow can’t save you now. The bottles piled up between my feet as my spirit fell from grace.
Rewind my soul right here on the beach, through moonlit skies, foliage symphonies and breaking waves, the bloody red shorelines are whispering my name. The night of the moth raises the divine wings of dawn or was it the other way around?
I am simon mills a friend of Gary Inman and Ben Part from Sideburn, also colleague of Fiddy from Davida.
well I'll be brief, in the olden days as a boy it was ducati Obsession, barcelona 24horas, Imola, then as a young man I discovered Le Mans, Bol d'or endurance racing, French style etc, I loved those bikes and the events, from the early eighties it was all about the underdog battling the mighty Japanese, as a student I saved and borrowed and built bikes around 900SS, Guzzi SP1000 T3 etc and they came and went, some still seem to be here.
Later on came other Guzzi and Ducati singles
the re-birth of the 750 sport 8 years ago
the re-built shed to remove 8 bikes from the house
Not so sure why, it just seemed like a good idea 9 years ago
.
I am simon mills a friend of Gary Inman and Ben Part from Sideburn, also colleague of Fiddy from Davida.
well I'll be brief, in the olden days as a boy it was ducati Obsession, barcelona 24horas, Imola, then as a young man I discovered Le Mans, Bol d'or endurance racing, French style etc, I loved those bikes and the events, from the early eighties it was all about the underdog battling the mighty Japanese, as a student I saved and borrowed and built bikes around 900SS, Guzzi SP1000 T3 etc and they came and went, some still seem to be here.
Later on came other Guzzi and Ducati singles
the re-birth of the 750 sport 8 years ago
the re-built shed to remove 8 bikes from the house
Not so sure why, it just seemed like a good idea 9 years ago
.
this is the offending oil hole
where the boss would be on B motors - note the pencil is pointing at open space
the solution
The next caution has to do with cam sprocket alignment. From what I have seen so far, I am led to believe that Harley has machined every pinion shaft from 1999 until now incorrectly. Every shaft is machined for the diameter of the cam chain drive sprocket just inboard from the portion that rides in the cam plate itself. This machining includes a "flat" on one side which positively locates the sprocket. This machined flat is the problem. Admittedly I have only checked a half dozen crank assemblies, but the range from 1999 to two brand new fresh out of the shipping crate 103" cranks. The specific problem is that the "flat" is machined deeper (further inboard) that the rest of the diameter for the sprocket by about .015". This causes the cam chain sprocket to pull in on that side when tightened. It gives said sprocket a similar amount of lateral runout, which in turn makes sprocket alignment between cam and pinion, shall we say ...interesting.
undercut deeper at the flat
There's not much you can do about the situation, as far as I can see, outside of being aware of the issue so that you can split the difference and minimise the misalignment between the two sprockets. If you were to simply follow the factory service manual and check the sprocket alignment, adjusting to within the Harley mandated .010, you may not think to turn the motor over 180 degrees and re-check. You may not think to, because the manual doesn't mention it. Whoever wrote the manual assumed (as most of us do) that the sprockets would install "square" on the shaft. Oops.
note gap between straight edge and top sprocket
rotate engine 180 degrees and note difference in gap
A comparison of a 1999 Twin Cam service manual with its 2009 counterpart is revealing. In 1999 the spec for flywheel runout was .002 maximum. By 2009 that spec was doubled to .004". Not only that, but the service wear limit (deemed acceptable by the factory before repair) in 1999 was .003 for flywheel runout, but .005" ten years later. Note that the .003" runout which was the limit before replacement in 1999 would be within new setup spec for 2009. In 1999 the spec for pinion shaft runout was .003, and no service wear limit was given. In 2009 that spec, though renamed (to protect the guilty?) is .010" with a whopping (or should I say wobbly) service wear limit of .012!
My conclusion? Harley reached its zenith for quality and engineering with the Evo motor. Of course they reached their zenith in just plain "class" much earlier with the Knucklehead!
The Stockers Tea Party was a great bash... great to ride and drink and laugh with friends. Thanks Steve for making the effort to put it together.
The Pan ran like a champ there and back... about 620 miles. It spewed oil (mainly because I over-filled the tank) wherever it stood and blew its front wheel bearing seal. So on the way back up north I stopped at Italian Motor Magazine HQ and my brother Adam helped me investigate whether the bearings were mashed or could take another couple of hundred miles' abuse.
With the help of a Frosties packet (slightly thicker than Shreddies) we created a cover for the blown cork seal which worked a treat. We repacked the bearings but Adam discovered there was at least a couple of mm lateral movement in the wheel once it was tightened down. Bearings? Worn spindle? Lost shims? Combination of all?
Dunno. Rode it anyway and only got rained on for 150 miles straight. My shiny pipes became shitty pipes.
Thanks bro! xx