Will this eventually clear with time, or are there some adjustments I should be making? For what it's worth I installed a new OEM clutch cable that was installed and adjusted per the manual.
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Clutch sticky in first gear with clutch pulled
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Clutch sticky in first gear with clutch pulled
The bike sat all winter without any oil in the engine. As a result, the clutch was very sticky in first gear with the clutch lever pulled. I'd have to keep the front brake on and rev the engine a bit to prevent forward motion or a stall. I realize that the plates probably dried out over the winter, and the first ride should have taken care of things. However, I've put about 100km on since then and it's still sticky in first gear with the clutch pulled, but only when first started up. After the bike warms up the problem goes away.
Will this eventually clear with time, or are there some adjustments I should be making? For what it's worth I installed a new OEM clutch cable that was installed and adjusted per the manual.Tags: None
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If it's the Katana does it have the hydraulic clutch? Maybe try bleeding it.
Edit. Sorry I thought your's was the pop-up headlight Katana but noticed it's the '82.Last edited by Sandy; 04-25-2018, 11:58 AM.'84 GS750EF (Oct 2015 BOM) '79 GS1000N (June 2007 BOM) My Flickr site http://www.flickr.com/photos/soates50/
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Forum LongTimerGSResource Superstar
Past Site Supporter- Oct 2006
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- London, UK to Redondo Beach, California
I think it'll clear up with an oil change personally... make sure the cable is adjusted right.
You could switch to a 10-40w
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sharpy
stop all these band-aid solutions. Pull the plates out and bath them in oil at same time bead blast the steel plates. Make SURE the steel plates go back in the way they came out. There stamp cut and one side is rounded and other has a sharp edge to it
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leftlostcommonsense
I had the same exact problem with brand new rotella t4 15w-40 and it didn't clear up even after pulling plates and soaking them. I think the 15w-40 rotella t4 is the cause for both of our problems. I put an ounce of seafoam in the oil and rode it a good 20 miles and it cleared it up. I'm not saying this will help you but it did me. I guess it kind of cleaned the friction plates IDK but it did fix it. The inside of my engine is clean as a whistle though. I wouldn't go putting seafoam in an engines oil with that has tons of crud in it that may break free and clog something up though.
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Matt420740
15w-40 is pretty thick when cold. I'd say fluid drag is probably the issue if it goes away once warm. Try something with a lower winter rating. 10w-40 or 5w-40 if you can find it. I run the 5w-40 synthetic version of Rotella. Don't have any drag unless its really really cold outside. I would avoid seafoam. It just dilutes the oil with solvent.Last edited by Guest; 04-28-2018, 05:37 AM.
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Originally posted by Matt420740 View Post15w-40 is pretty thick when cold. I'd say fluid drag is probably the issue if it goes away once warm. Try something with a lower winter rating. 10w-40 or 5w-40 if you can find it. I run the 5w-40 synthetic version of Rotella. Don't have any drag unless its really really cold outside. I would avoid seafoam. It just dilutes the oil with solvent.
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leftlostcommonsense
I don't think an ounce of what's basically alcohol is going to do any harm to over 3 quarts of oil especially since it's made to go in the crankcase anyhow. It may not be the best thing but it did work to fix the drag I'm just going to be sure to change the oil a lil sooner this time around. The thing that makes me wonder about your cold weather temps and 15w-40 being too thick comment is the fact it was dragging for a whole 10-15 miles yesterday although it was 80 degrees here yesterday. Between the ambient temp and bike up to operating temp the drag should have stopped if it was because of the oil being too thick. I added an ounce of seafoam and felt a difference within the first 5 miles and it only continued to get better until no more drag at all.
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Matt420740
Originally posted by leftlostcommonsense View PostI don't think an ounce of what's basically alcohol is going to do any harm to over 3 quarts of oil especially since it's made to go in the crankcase anyhow.
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Originally posted by Matt420740 View PostSuzuki, nor any other engine manufacturer on the planet, recommends seafoam in the crankcase. The only company that recommends seafoam in the crankcase is seafoam....... and they don't produce engines.GSX1300R NT650 XV535
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Originally posted by Matt420740 View Post15w-40 is pretty thick when cold. I'd say fluid drag is probably the issue if it goes away once warm. Try something with a lower winter rating. 10w-40 or 5w-40 if you can find it. I run the 5w-40 synthetic version of Rotella. Don't have any drag unless its really really cold outside. I would avoid seafoam. It just dilutes the oil with solvent.
I was plagued with cold clutch drag for years until I lobbed in some 5W40 and kept it in the entire winter. Worked like a charm, sorted the clutch and the engine was a bit more free-revving.---- Dave
Only a dog knows why a motorcyclist sticks his head out of a car window
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