Can't seem to find a tolerance for the fit between the bushing i.d. and the mainshaft for a 3rd gear in a big twin transmission. I know the manual calls out the bearing fits, but I guessed that referred to the needle bearings in the countershaft and the main drive gear. Does anybody have that elusive bit of info?
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3rd gear bushing fit
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What year book are you looking at? The info is in the specs in the Panhead service manuals. From '59 up the bushing was eliminated on 4 speeds so late info won't show it. .001-.002 to shaft.
https://www.hydra-glide.net/joomla/i...ission-generalRobbie Knight Amca #2736
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Third gear is probably the highest stressed gear in a HD 4 speed gearbox due to it's offset. I always try to stay below .0015" for clearance.
Jerry
Originally posted by Rubone View PostWhat year book are you looking at? The info is in the specs in the Panhead service manuals. From '59 up the bushing was eliminated on 4 speeds so late info won't show it. .001-.002 to shaft.
https://www.hydra-glide.net/joomla/i...ission-general
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What I found most important, Omartentmaker,....
Is to lathe bore the bushing true to its outer circumference.
Just poke-reaming or honing the bushing can make it whine.
...Cotten
PS: Idler gear shown bored similarly.Attached FilesAMCA #776
Dumpster Diver's Motto: Seek,... and Ye Shall Find!
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Originally posted by larry View PostYou might consider finding the late cluster. You already have the late gear. Harley upgraded for a reason.
But the bushed gear was used for handshifts through at least '65.
Don't know why, as I got away with both designs on handshift machines.
...CottenAMCA #776
Dumpster Diver's Motto: Seek,... and Ye Shall Find!
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It was used on 3&R boxes through the '60s, the updated gears for 3&R are -70 part numbers. Apparently not enough out there for an earlier update. If you have a '59 low cluster the bushed third gear won't work due to the depth of the recess in the cluster. It only works with the early one. And vice versa as you have discovered. The longer sleeve on the '59 up gear was to help with the premature wear and whine in the bushing type.Robbie Knight Amca #2736
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Thanks to all for your input. May be I will hunt for a later cluster. And Cotten, you're right about boring the bushing, but my old clunker of a lathe doesn't have a three jaw that runs true enough to bore like you show. I'll have to put up a 4 jaw, and put 4 dowel pins at 90 degrees in the teeth, indicate the bushing and bore to size. My thought with using the dowels in the teeth is that it might cut down on the whine, as the gear's pitch line will run truer if I use that as the indicator datum.
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A four-jaw is most proper, Omar!
I'm just lucky to have a very precise Cushman three-jaw.
(Not the scooter brand, I believe.)
Shimming or dowels is the only way it could be adjusted.
....Cotten
PS: All three of my hand-shift 1965 transmissions with bushed gears are four-speeds.
Just as I found them; one a Kansas City PD machine that was only ten years old.AMCA #776
Dumpster Diver's Motto: Seek,... and Ye Shall Find!
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Originally posted by T. Cotten View PostA four-jaw is most proper, Omar!
P.S. Now for the last word.Bob Rice #6738
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AMCA #776
Dumpster Diver's Motto: Seek,... and Ye Shall Find!
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