- Posts: 4178
- Thank you received: 2388
1976 Kz 900 A4
- Wookie58
- Offline
- Moderator
For clarity I was referencing the stress applied in comparison to the gears I have used this method on previously, I am sure you will agree there is significantly more torque load on car transmission components I was also under the impression (happy to be corrected) that the hardening on drive gears was between 1mm & 10mm deep dependent on the size and purpose of the gear. Are you saying they are "case hardened" (always looking to learn)We commonly touched up burrs on gears with an oilstone at the factory, remarkable how much noise a small burr on the oilpump gear contacting the primary gear can make! If the teeth are pitted the surface heat treatment is probably gone, however I don't think that just a few teeth would be a cause of concern? I don't understand the comments about just a little load on the gear, it is the PRIMARY gear along with being the oilpump gear.
Mike
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- Skidmark
- Away
- User
- Posts: 1069
- Thank you received: 265
Retired gearhead
'81 KZ-750 E2
'87 Suzuki Savage 650 Street Tracker (lost in the shop fire)
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- Wookie58
- Offline
- Moderator
- Posts: 4178
- Thank you received: 2388
So 0.25 - 0.75mm - As I said "happy to stand corrected", my career has centred around fixing and fitting parts, not making them In your opinion on that basis would you agree the gear in question is still useable?Case hardening is rarely thicker than .010" - .030". If an application requires hardness deeper than that the entire part would get hardened, and would never be done to a gear. Just my experience from a career in the metal fabrication industry.
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- krazee1
- Offline
- User
- Posts: 357
- Thank you received: 196
Agreed! I personally would polish the fugley teeth and use the crankshaft, there are other teeth to help carry the load, so to speak. As you said finding a perfect 40+ YO crankshaft is very unlikely, although there has to be some NOS pieces hiding somewhere. How much do you suppose KHI would charge for a reproduction crankshaft seeing that the cylinder heads are 2K+?
Mike
Former M.E. at Kawasaki Motors Manufacturing, Lincoln, NE
1966 W1 (the Z1 of 1966-50H.P. and 100mph!)
1974 Z1
1978 KZ1000 LTD
1976 KZ900B pile O parts
1980 KZ750E
1980 Honda XL250S (I know, wrong flavor!)
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- calum
- Offline
- User
- Posts: 1127
- Thank you received: 399
KZ1000 Restomod ( www.kzrider.com/forum/11-projects/614517-1977-kz1000-restomod )
1977 KZ1000A1 ( www.kzrider.com/forum/11-projects/616901...-spare-parts-project )
1980 KZ750H ( kzrider.com/forum/11-projects/612054-kz750h-restoration )
2000 BMW F650GS
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- Mikaw
- Topic Author
- Offline
- Sustaining Member
- Posts: 4831
- Thank you received: 1847
1976 KZ 900 A4 kzrider.com/forum/11-projects/613548-1976-kz-900-a4
1976 KZ 900 B1 LTD
1978 KZ 1000 B2 LTD
1980 KZ 750 E1
Kowledge Speaks, But Wisdom Listens.
Jimi Hendrix.
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- Mikaw
- Topic Author
- Offline
- Sustaining Member
- Posts: 4831
- Thank you received: 1847
Calum, thank you, very generous offer. If I do need anything I’ll reach out. The plan is to take both crankshafts to Pearson Racing, and have him assemble one good crankshaft out of the two. I’ll have it indexed and welded. Pearson is about a 6 hour round trip for me.Not sure if this is an option as it may get pretty expensive unless you know a guy... I have a disassembled crank and all the parts are good with the exception of the taper for the rotor (bent in a crash). I could send some parts over for the cost of shipping - you'd need to find someone to disassemble and reassemble that end of the crank and then get it balanced.
1976 KZ 900 A4 kzrider.com/forum/11-projects/613548-1976-kz-900-a4
1976 KZ 900 B1 LTD
1978 KZ 1000 B2 LTD
1980 KZ 750 E1
Kowledge Speaks, But Wisdom Listens.
Jimi Hendrix.
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- calum
- Offline
- User
- Posts: 1127
- Thank you received: 399
KZ1000 Restomod ( www.kzrider.com/forum/11-projects/614517-1977-kz1000-restomod )
1977 KZ1000A1 ( www.kzrider.com/forum/11-projects/616901...-spare-parts-project )
1980 KZ750H ( kzrider.com/forum/11-projects/612054-kz750h-restoration )
2000 BMW F650GS
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- Dragbike_Mike
- Offline
- Sustaining Member
- Posts: 146
- Thank you received: 102
This is the right approach, IMHO. Yes, it will cost some $$$$s but you'll be able to sleep better at night knowing, with certainty, that you'll be bolting in a good crank. The foundation of a strong running motor.
The plan is to take both crankshafts to Pearson Racing, and have him assemble one good crankshaft out of the two. I’ll have it indexed and welded. Pearson is about a 6 hour round trip for me.
Mike
Presently - 1980 KZ1000B4 LTD w/mild ported head, Megacycle cams, 1015cc Wiseco, Falicon Supercrank, R&D undercut trans
In a former life - KZ-based dragbike - CrMo car tire chassis, 1395cc, Hahn Racecraft turbo system, VP C16, Orient Express 3-spd auto, 7.80's @ 165-170.
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- Mikaw
- Topic Author
- Offline
- Sustaining Member
- Posts: 4831
- Thank you received: 1847
Question how is Elliot tape properly used to re-wrap an OEM harness.
Behind the scenes I’ve been working on parts selection and detail work on small parts. Till I’m 100% on the crankshaft, I’m trying my hand at harness restoration. My test piece is a ‘77 1000 A1 main section in fair condition. My A4 harness is better so I figured if I can revive this one my original harness should be easier. I cut back the tape and sheathing back far enough to expose the terminals and a couple inches of wire. Opened up any rubbed spots for inspection and left the rest intact till I can get it mounted on a section of board and lay it in its natural relaxed position. Not concerned if I damaged the rest of the tape I soaked the entire harness in purple power. Lifting sections out to scrub. I pulled back all of the connector covers and scrubbed them also. Rinsing the harness off I still didn’t think the color had been restored. About a mont ago I accidentally dropped a rear tail light ground cable into metal rescue. A few hours later when I pulled the part out I noticed how bright and clean the ground lead looked. Again I’m not too concerned with the harness surviving I thought I’d drop it into metal rescue and see if it would brighten the colors and the brass connectors. It worked pretty well. I made all of the repairs necessary ordered some sections of gloss black sheathing from vintage connections along with some other connectors in the off-white almost yellow color that perfectly match the OEM. I also picked up some Elliot tape. My question is after this long description of work, how is the Elliott tape used. I had assumed it was not adhesive backed but in reality it is. The OEM tape that I cut off of the harness had no adhesive on it, or after forty years it’s dried up.
1976 KZ 900 A4 kzrider.com/forum/11-projects/613548-1976-kz-900-a4
1976 KZ 900 B1 LTD
1978 KZ 1000 B2 LTD
1980 KZ 750 E1
Kowledge Speaks, But Wisdom Listens.
Jimi Hendrix.
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- Wookie58
- Offline
- Moderator
- Posts: 4178
- Thank you received: 2388
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- Street Fighter LTD
- Offline
- Moderator
- TURBO, Its Better to be Blown than Injected
- Posts: 4906
- Thank you received: 2052
DD
Original owner 78 1000 LTD
Mr Turbo Race Kit, MTC 1075 Turbo pistons by PitStop Performance , Falicon Ultra Lite Super Crank, APE everything. Les Holt @ PDM's Billet Goodies . Frame by Chuck Kurzawa @ Logghe Chassis . Deep sump 5qt oil pan. RIP Bill Hahn
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.