by SwanAustin » Tue Jul 03, 2012 7:05 pm
Thanks for the insight, David. That's the spring I was thinking about.
I took the side cover off again today, but (without further disassembly) everything seems to be unbroken and properly seated. What's more, the shifter seems to move okay and return to center with the cover off, but of course I can't ride it like this to test so I can only wiggle it while rolling the bike back and forth.
I notice on the inside of the cover there is a pad (for lack of a better word) in the casting that seems to control end play for the shifter shaft. The shaft can move freely about a quarter of an inch with the cover removed.
The idea has occurred to me that perhaps the combination of gasket (and the Hylomar I used for good measure) allowed too much end play and led to the problem. I didn't see the oil light come on or anything (I read in another thread that gasket thickness might affect the oil pressure control spring/ball setup), so I didn't think the gasket thickness might otherwise be a factor here. But I could be wrong.
Unfortunately the possibility didn't occur to me until after I tore the thing apart again, so I'm not exactly sure what end play the shaft had while it was assembled. If you (or anybody else out there) has an assembled and properly shifting 125 on hand, do you know (or could you check) if the shifter shaft has any end-to-end movement? No disassembly required--one could just reach down to where the lever attaches to the shaft and push/pull gently to see if the shaft moves in or out. I'd greatly appreciate the data on a "known good" example.
The other possibility is that there isn't enough end play and the mechanism is binding. The pad in the casting is flush with the gasket mating surface, which (based on my bike) would allow only the gasket's thickness as end play. So if my gasket is too thin, the shaft would be harder to turn, which as I write this starts to seem the more likely explanation. Unfortunately I have never had the OEM gasket to measure and/or compare with what I had made myself--it had been thrown out by the previous owner. If anybody has a stock gasket and a micrometer (or even a "best guess" as to whether it is thicker or thinner than plain yellow manilla envelope paper), I'd really appreciate a measurement.
I guess the real solution is an OEM gasket. But I'm trying to minimize the money spent until I am sure the thing is more-or-less fully functional (of course the freewheel thing is toast, but push-start is okay for a race bike, and it will enable me to shed some additional weight from the bike). And that doesn't even address the US Parts availability situation. If I can get away with cutting my own, I'd prefer to do so.
Thanks in advance for any help you can give me.
-S