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changing the oil

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Recovering from a series of maladies , I just had  to do something usefull.  I drained the tank and sump and refilled from my stock of gifted 10/40 Yamalube . I detached the rubber return pipe and started the motor and waited for the oil oil to run till clear.  After a while and no oil ,the penny dropped and I looked under the bike. Its amazing how much dirty oil there is still in the motor and how far it can spread . I think I will use this method in future but include a tray. Do you do anything like this or is it just me?.

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An engineer colleague of mine was working on theoretical failure probability. He said one day that the probability of engine failure through leaving out the sump plug after an oil change was greater than if you simply did not change the oil. How we laughed! Until he sold his car to a friend, and it promptly seized up on the M4.

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I change the oil, refit the sump plug but leave the filter off.  I then run the engine with cardboard between the filter housing and the swinging arm, and allow the old oil to carry on running through the engine and into the tray under the filter housing.  It will run for around a minute before the clean oil starts to come through.  Then I stop the engine and fit the filter.  This is a little messy, but it results in clean oil through the whole system. 

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I have always made my own rules.  I change oil only when it appears dirty  and usually try to do it at the end of the riding season  so that the motor does not sit with old oil. I have a number of magnets in the system and  they stay clear of fragments. Once built and previous owners  efforts put right  they  run and run  , can't remember ever rebuilding a motor of mine  twice. I have had to rebuild the boys motor as a lack of oil changes  wore the rings out. He can pay the bill! I have run up to 5 bikes and 3 cars/vans  at a time so there is always plenty to do. David Coopers comment brings back some memories, Sons GF insisted on looking after her own car, the garage left the drain plug loose ,new engine needed. Sisters hubby did not think me capable of fixing his Rover Sterling Big end ,the garage forgot to refill the gearbox ,wrote off the car. 

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Doing my end of year oil change on the 99 ,  I recalled how much extra oil and swarf   that came out of  an Italian bike after I  tipped it on its side and end.  Got me thinking about retained oil in the 99.  Laid it on its left footrest  to clear the timing chest,  the clutch bearings probably got a usefull dousing,  the cam tunnel (a proper feature on the 99!) has probably got detritus from 30 years use so a tip over to the right to clear  also gives the rusty gearchange bits a much needed bath and gets that last half cupfull out of the oil tank.  A fill of new oil and a run with the return disconnected clears the plumbing ,  What  else do you like to  do ?.

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Hi Robert,

The basics have already been covered in this thread with at least one important issue missing.

Most of my tanks, regardless of oil changes accumulate sludge in the bottom, I put this down to infrequent use and possibly the use of non detergent oil.

Ideally, one would remove the tank and wash it out but with the number of Norton's I have, this would be a pain. What I do is use a pack of fiber cloths from a supermarket and with the tank empty, using a long screwdriver I use a whole cloth and go around the inside of the tank. I keep doing this until the whole cloth comes out clean.

Use the whole cloth and check the cloth is complete before discarding it. This method usually requires a whole pack.. Surprising how much sludge accumulates in a year, though some tanks start out cleaner than others.

Obviously, give the bike a run before you start to make the sludge run out more easily. 

Alternatively, remove the oil tank and use a chemical:

LM 5200 Oil Sludge Flush 300 Ml

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I had for a few miles (20K) a 1985 850 Motoguzzi. Wet sump with oil filter inside the sump! Sounds dreadful-but no. You need to change the filter every two years, so no big issue and the oil was always 'clean' such that even at an oil change you wondered why you was changing it? Ie the Guzzi always seemed to have clean oil, didn't leak or hardly use it. So the way the engine 'uses' oil is impressive. Not so the Nortons.

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Clean oil? What's that? Whenever I put clean oil in my '55 ES2 then do a 10 or 12 mile run it comes out black.

George

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Sounds very much like retained oil, half a cupfull in the tank plus a cupfull in the Pump ,crank and pipes.  Running for a  while with the return pipe  directed into a tin  will  pump a surprising amount of black stuff.      I think Alans clean oil comes from a  cleaner burn engine.  I'm working towards that ideal  with my custom drilled carb jets ,  Next will be balanced  inlet tracts, chamber volumes ,valve timing  and  ignition  timing  equal on both cylinders . I hope to get it ticking over  like an old clock. that should keep me occupied over the winter.  

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I had black oil very quickly on my 16H.

Problem was the oil control ring.  Fine now.

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Very interesting about the need to lube the outer part of the gearbox, I did'nt spot the need for that (although it is clean and wet with oil so far ). Strikes me it might be an idea to fill the outer up from time to time , then drain it back out with my big syringe ?

Also, references above to a filter - is that one of those added into the return line ?, would be good to add one if the return system on a '99 is OK with one. I have an old T100 and many club members advised against one as it restricted return flow. I fitted one anyway and the return is instant and un-changed. Is there a best kit for the 99 anyone ?

Regards all

Terry.

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I think there are far too many syringes in society today. (God help us) Why not use the gearbox level plug and job done.......

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A syringe might be usefull to clear out the primary  , once you have got the thing leakproof  its a shame to disturb it. I bought one to get the last dregs out of the oil tank ,but it failed . looks trick on the workshop wall though !!.

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Quite right about no need for a syringe, to have the outside case go dry and rusty  (as I had read earlier )  I assumed the outer was dry, like the Vincent I had. It's obvious from where the level plug is it is well oiled. 

Put it down to a senior moment please , rather than being a bit dim !

 

 

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Even with  the correct oil level the gearchange bits in the outer cover can go rusty as its well above the oil level and clear of oil splash.  Its more an issue if the box has no vent ( small hole in inspection plate or screwed in breather on some Commando's.).  An oil change every couple of years  would help. Water can run down the clutch cable adjuster too.

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So that's it, thanks Robert for filling in the background to this, so a full 'dunk' would'nt  go  amiss every now and then !  I'll shall make sure there is a breather on my gearbox.

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Dave Cormeau did an article showing no need for the breather (running without allegedly pushes gearbox oil down the centre of the mainsheet into the clutch/ primary case). He found that it was impossible to pressurise as the clutch cable isn't sealed and it vents from there instead. The gearbox will never get hot enough to remove moisture from within during normal running so to me, it is better not to have the cover vent as that blocks at least one entry point. Water running down clutch cable? You can always put a rubber 'boot' over the cable end  to stop water going in if you want.

I agree with Robert in that the change linkage, especially the pawl spring rusts as it is both above the oil level and the outer part of the box doesn't see much oil movement to coat it as nothing really happens in there to fling the oil about unless your bike needs 20 kicks to get started!

Regards, George.

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A rubber boot on the cable would be good , but who  is going to cut off the nipple  to put one on?. Should come with the cable .   Manufacturers have only had  60 + years to think about it.  Give them time !  .

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Boot on before putting the cable into the gearbox! It is a teeny weeny nipple at the gearbox end! Goes through the top if the boot easily!

 

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Never realised it was this complicated. I usually drain crankcase (and look at filter gauze), drain oil tank with the handy drain bolt, bolts back in and fill with oil.

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Because of the very crude filter arrangement of most orriginal Brit bikes  and the lack of detergent in some Classic oils   a build up of sludge  in the tank was common. This would not move much even if well warmed up  ,and would stay to  contaminate the new oil . Some think the sludge is a good thing that traps  grit and swarf !,  sort of a  crude filter,  I think its likely to centrifuge  in the crank  ,restrict the flow to the drive side big end and therefore the piston , result  seized drive side piston when conditions are  a bit  tough.  I should fit a return filter, I have a kit  decorating the workshop wall, I put it there when i heard the spigots were prone to self ejection and the pipes (ordered for a 99) turned up suitable for  something else .  

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 HI Robert, 

I built my clutch cable myself from a kit of bits so it is easy to put things like that on first.

As yours is already built, you could use a short length of heat shrink -it should fit over the adjuster and when shrunk down will do the same job of stopping moisture going in.

Regards, George 

 


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