


When I say stronger I mean one that wont break, or rustalec wrote:wouldn't a stronger spring cause it to over tension the chain though, i'd have thought the spring was made to allow the correct pressure on it.
sorry Tray wasn't picking holes just asking a questionRider on a Storm wrote:When I say stronger I mean one that wont break, or rustalec wrote:wouldn't a stronger spring cause it to over tension the chain though, i'd have thought the spring was made to allow the correct pressure on it.
no need for apoligies mate I no you were only asking a question, sorry if my answer seem abrupt didnt mean for it to bealec wrote:sorry Tray wasn't picking holes just asking a questionRider on a Storm wrote:When I say stronger I mean one that wont break, or rustalec wrote:wouldn't a stronger spring cause it to over tension the chain though, i'd have thought the spring was made to allow the correct pressure on it.
This isn't a bad idea, it would be easier and cheaper to make a closer-fitting top shield that would sit tight enough to the sprockets so that a slack chain couldn't jump over the teeth.bazza696 wrote:If you are redesigning the cct, then could you design it to a length tba the cam chain would not slip over the sprocket, and have a red pin in the end when failure happens gives you tba indication.
This solves two problems, no more mangled valves, and easier to manufacture.
Pardon my ignorance but what are the dimensions of the actual spring in the stock CCT?I am not going to bore the ti*s of you but funnily enough the spring calcs for the CCT give a minimum spring diameter of just 0.125mm
No idea Kev, its a bloomin biro spring! Torsion spring from a Parker pen.Kev L wrote:Pardon my ignorance but what are the dimensions of the actual spring in the stock CCT?I am not going to bore the ti*s of you but funnily enough the spring calcs for the CCT give a minimum spring diameter of just 0.125mm
Tony, I went the way of David Greenwood springs on mine. Prob would have fitted the stopper mod had I kept the bike though!tony.mon wrote:I've been looking for it (yet can't find), but there is info on here somewhere for a bloke called David Greenwood who sold spare springs.
AFAIR they were stainless, but of course a stainless spring doesn't hold its temper as well as carbon steel, so may not have been the complete and easy answer it seemed.
However this might be an answer for those who feel that a sprung plunger is the way Honda designed it, and so want to avoid a manual solution.