- Sat Oct 28, 2017 6:37 am
#71744
Adrian. I too went the steel conrod route and roller bigend for my 535cc. You must get it balanced as only a small amount out-of-balance means LOTS of destructive vibration.
When new I measured the balance factor on my 1996 bike (now 535cc) it was about 68%. When I fitted the steel conrod, I found the OEM conrod was ~20 thou longer than expected, perhaps due to stretch! I followed some advice (NOT our hosts) and didn’t re-balance the new conrod. The destructive vibrations caused by the balance factor being out by ~45grammes, cost me the drive side crank pin, stator and other stuff. When we then balanced the crank, I followed the reported advice by Fritz Egli (British Bike Magazine, Oct 1994) and set the balance factor to 61-62%. That is definitely smoother up to ~3500rpm but doesn’t damp enough vibration at higher revs making acceleration through the gears quite unpleasant. I now have to replace the piston because of a dropped valve when the aluminium valve retainer snapped. This was caused, we think, by the OEM tappet adjuster being offset to the pushrod by a few degrees which resulted in the pushrod flexing continually leading to valve bounce. I shall set the balance factor now to 63% and advice on results.
Cheers, ChrisD
When new I measured the balance factor on my 1996 bike (now 535cc) it was about 68%. When I fitted the steel conrod, I found the OEM conrod was ~20 thou longer than expected, perhaps due to stretch! I followed some advice (NOT our hosts) and didn’t re-balance the new conrod. The destructive vibrations caused by the balance factor being out by ~45grammes, cost me the drive side crank pin, stator and other stuff. When we then balanced the crank, I followed the reported advice by Fritz Egli (British Bike Magazine, Oct 1994) and set the balance factor to 61-62%. That is definitely smoother up to ~3500rpm but doesn’t damp enough vibration at higher revs making acceleration through the gears quite unpleasant. I now have to replace the piston because of a dropped valve when the aluminium valve retainer snapped. This was caused, we think, by the OEM tappet adjuster being offset to the pushrod by a few degrees which resulted in the pushrod flexing continually leading to valve bounce. I shall set the balance factor now to 63% and advice on results.
Cheers, ChrisD