Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Stuck Clutch Cover Dowel
Collapse
X
-
Stuck Clutch Cover Dowel
I'm replacing my clutch cover with a spare one I polished up. The polished cover has one of the dowels stuck in it and the corresponding hole on the engine side also has a dowel stuck there. I'm trying to remove the one from the clutch cover to avoid buggering up on the engine side. At least I can use the original cover if I somehow screw up the polished one. I've tried penetrant and tapping with a hard plastic mallet to no avail. I even tried to grab the dowel with channel locks with a little padding between the jaws. I have a spare dowel so I then tried to grab the bare dowel with the channel locks. No luck. I also tried tapping straight down on the dowel to shock it. The cover is now laying "dowel-side" up with PB Blaster soaking down into the hole (hopefully). Anybody know any tricks for this?1983 GS 1100 Guided Laser
1983 GS 1100 G
2000 Suzuki Intruder 1500, "Piggy Sue"
2000 GSF 1200 Bandit (totaled in deer strike)
1986 Suzuki Cavalcade GV 1400 LX (SOLD)
I find working on my motorcycle mildly therapeutic when I'm not cursing.Tags: None
-
78550GS
I have used a dent puller on a pair of needle nosed vice grips.
I also have another pair of needle nose vice grips that have a plate welded to one side at 90* to allow "tapping" and do the same thing as the dent puller.
*I don't recommend destroying GOOD tools to make one time use tools.*
-
Thanks for the ideas. I will see what I have laying around to improvise with after a while soaking.1983 GS 1100 Guided Laser
1983 GS 1100 G
2000 Suzuki Intruder 1500, "Piggy Sue"
2000 GSF 1200 Bandit (totaled in deer strike)
1986 Suzuki Cavalcade GV 1400 LX (SOLD)
I find working on my motorcycle mildly therapeutic when I'm not cursing.
Comment
-
I second the use of heat, a small propane torch for the heat applied to the cover surrounding the pin and your grips on the pin with a twisting pressure and you will know when it let's go, then just pull it out.
VGustov
80 GS 1100 LT, 83 1100 G "Scruffy"
81 GS 1000 G
79 GS 850 G
81 GS 850 L
83 GS 550 ES, 85 GS 550 ES
80 GS 550 L
86 450 Rebel, 70CL 70, Yamaha TTR125
2002 Honda 919
2004 Ural Gear up
Comment
-
Thanks for the help. I did try heat originally but only with a heat gun. I'm not sure that counts but it's all I have right now. I googled this situation on the web and it seems they can be pretty stubborn sometimes.1983 GS 1100 Guided Laser
1983 GS 1100 G
2000 Suzuki Intruder 1500, "Piggy Sue"
2000 GSF 1200 Bandit (totaled in deer strike)
1986 Suzuki Cavalcade GV 1400 LX (SOLD)
I find working on my motorcycle mildly therapeutic when I'm not cursing.
Comment
-
Thanks, got it. Seems even the Harbor Freight heat gun is enough to make a difference. I was just more persistent this time. It started to twist pretty soon but it was surprising how much longer it took to get it to pullout. Eventually I locked on it with some needle nose vice grips so the needle ends extended past the lip of the cover so I could hammer on (abuse) them. That finally worked but it was surprising how it tightened up fairly quickly if i didn't keep heating the aluminum. Anyway, deed is done thanks to GSR help.1983 GS 1100 Guided Laser
1983 GS 1100 G
2000 Suzuki Intruder 1500, "Piggy Sue"
2000 GSF 1200 Bandit (totaled in deer strike)
1986 Suzuki Cavalcade GV 1400 LX (SOLD)
I find working on my motorcycle mildly therapeutic when I'm not cursing.
Comment
Comment