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End play in pinion shaft V65 SP 1984

Julian Sudano

Tuned and Synch'ed
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Hi All,

I pulled the drive box off my bike today as I thought it was probably long overdue some grease on the drive shaft splines and to replace the 41 year old cush blocks. When I bought the bike 3 years ago it was obvious that jobs like this that were beyond the previous owner's remit, and therefore ignored.

I discovered that there is about 1mm of end play (is this the correct expression) in the pinon shaft, which I believe is not such a good thing, according to a few YouTube videos I have watched. Unfortunately I can't upload a video clip but when I pull the splined end of the pinion shaft, it will move in and out slightly. There is some kind of tension that pulls it back into the case.

Is this an acceptable amount of play or does it need to be re-shimmed? My bike suffers from a lot of whine, especially in a "power off" situation during acceleration so I'm wondering if this is the culprit...

Thanks for any input!

Julian Sudano
Los Angeles

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There should be no end play. I suggest you contact Todd's shop using the Service tab as shimming a gearbox is best performed by trained professionals.
Thanks John - appreciate your input. Any idea on why this happens? I've drained the oil and there is not swarf at all.
 
Wear, wrong oil grade, shimmed marginal from factory. Not a bad job if you have the shims & equipment to do the job..
You can check backlash & tooth contact point with some blueing paste and a puller to load ring gear onto cover.
If you are close to Todd, go there. Did my 1st one in 84 when i stripped splines on my LM3. Last smallblock was in mid 90's.

Read workshop manual in downloads. There was also an update at some point to drill a hole in housing to supply more oil to pinion bearings.

I would contact Todd.
 
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If you want to take a look how such job looks like. And I am not convincing you I did it right. Just did it, and I enjoy the ride. Shims are widely available on eBay, and yes, you need some specific tools...

 
Wear, wrong oil grade, shimmed marginal from factory. Not a bad job if you have the shims & equipment to do the job..
You can check backlash & tooth contact point with some blueing paste and a puller to load ring gear onto cover.
If you are close to Todd, go there. Did my 1st one in 84 when i stripped splines on my LM3. Last smallblock was in mid 90's.

Read workshop manual in downloads. There was also an update at some point to drill a hole in housing to supply more oil to pinion bearings.

I would contact Todd.
Unfortunately GuzziTech aren't interested in this "small job" right now, so I proceeded and pulled the pinon cluster apart to take a look! Two things were apparent:
1) the collar nut which is staked at the notch on the pinion shaft had not been staked terribly well, and I could rotate it slightly with my fingers, while holding the shaft in my other hand.
2) there is some nasty pitting on the concave side base, of each tooth of the pinion gear. See pic.

Would this contribute to noise from the unit, and is it junk at this stage?

I haven't looked at the crown wheel assembly yet....so will be very curious to see what state those teeth are in!
 

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If you want to take a look how such job looks like. And I am not convincing you I did it right. Just did it, and I enjoy the ride. Shims are widely available on eBay, and yes, you need some specific tools...

Thanks - this is excellent. Appreciated mate!
 
Was it incredibly difficult removing the outer races of both conical bearings, from the pinion shaft housing? And how was it putting new ones back in, if you did?
 
If you warm up the housing the outer race knocks out w/a punch from other end. I seen worse gears, you can't change one. They are matched. Don't buy cheap bearings.
Wear, wrong oil grade, shimmed marginal from factory. Not a bad job if you have the shims & equipment to do the job..
You can check backlash & tooth contact point with some blueing paste and a puller to load ring gear onto cover.
If you are close to Todd, go there. Did my 1st one in 84 when i stripped splines on my LM3. Last smallblock was in mid 90's.

Read workshop manual in downloads. There was also an update at some point to drill a hole in housing to supply more oil to pinion bearings.

I would contact Todd.
So in place of a puller, could you just reassemble the entire unit, and test for tooth contact with bluing paste? I'm trying to figure out how the puller would work. Crown gear shows pretty minimal wear.
 
The reason for the puller is to create action that is like actual running. When spinning normally assembled on bike the crown moves out towards the cover. To create actual for contact patch on ring & pinion you need a puller to do so.
I had special arms made to fit in like factory tool. You also need to drill hole on an angle to feed more oil to tapered bearings as update was to be done.
 
OK - thanks for the information on the puller. I am trying to picture how that would all go together!
With regards to the extra hole, I'm assuming that it would need to go where I have marked the X in this picture? I'm beginning to wonder if it is slop/wear in the bearings as I have tightened the collar nut to the point where the bearings are beginning to bind and while it has reduced the end play ever so slightly, when I spin the pinion shaft that I get "shudder", and I still have discernable end float.

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I would really have to search for placement of the hole. I used to have a sheet of paper w/bulletin on it from around 84 or 5 & don't know where it went. Got rid of lots of stuff w/moving. I know i had it before moving to GA. All warranties stuff was done on paper then.
I don't think is was on the x but in the center on an angle going in. You may find it here in archives somewhere.
 
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