Trippivot said:
no failures eh? ever? yeah like we all believe that. the tip I gave away freely is true. bad information is the easiest to get.
if the circlip is at 12 and 6 it works like a self lock inside the groove-both ends pushing outward together. anywhere else and the flex of going up and down will pop it right out of the groove one side against another-like a spring. try squeezing one like a c and then squeeze one right on the opening. my point will stick right into your finger. it is a true engine building detail.
20 years and never worried about where the circlip opening is? next you probably like to put the top ring opening gap at 12 and 6 o'clock too??
which is also a no no it is called the thrust surface...
Whilst I agree that you should not reassemble the piston rings at 12 and 6 o'clock I'm not so sure that it's a big no-no. Rings will move around on ther own and I've pulled engines apart that I know were put back properly and found the rings in, or close to, those positions.
The absolutely key thing is that both gaps don't end up in the same place - and the chances of that happening at random, with the rings moving round, must be almost unmeasurable.
Of course, on strokers you have the pegs in the ring grooves to stop this happening. This is to stop the end of the ring poking in to a port and snapping off. If ring position was critical on 4 strokes then I'm sure that manufacturers would put pegs on those pistons as well.
On the subject of pin clips, again I'm not so sure. I've always done it 'right' with the type of clip that is in our GSs but on some bikes (I'm trying to think of a specific model but can't - definitely some early Suzukis though) they use a butterfly clip. In the manufacturer's service book clip position isn't specified.
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