My 1940 Chief has, what seems like an excessive amount of slop in the distributor shaft. To me it looks like about 10 degrees of free play between the slop in the rotor, and the slop in the dist. shaft key where it goes into the pump. Is that normal ? It runs okay, but I've noticed a jerkiness in certain power bands.
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Originally posted by exeric View PostNevermind, I found the information I needed in the military Chief manual.
Whoops! Never mind, just saw your response with "minimal" being the key word. Thanks for passing that along.Pisten Bully is Harry Roberts in Vermont.
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Eric, you can just weld the tang and regrind it. Also on the rotor, I just put a small piece of paper over the top of the shaft then push the rotor down onto it. It will tighten it up pretty well.
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Harry, the exact wording is:
Try to turn the rotor right and left. If it has too much play, the rotor shaft is worn. Free play on new equipement is approximately (1/8").
Mine has quite a bit more than 1/8" so I'm looking for a new shaft.
The book I have is "OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, INDIAN MOTORCYCLE, MODELS 340-B/344"
Very dry reading but it has been invaluable for my Chief and has more information than any service manual I've seen.Eric Smith
AMCA #886
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Originally posted by indianut View PostEric, you can just weld the tang and regrind it. Also on the rotor, I just put a small piece of paper over the top of the shaft then push the rotor down onto it. It will tighten it up pretty well.Eric Smith
AMCA #886
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Originally posted by exeric View PostThanks Danny. I was hoping someone would say that as I have already silver soldered shim stock to the tang. The paper trick is brilliant.
"Tang" used to be something the astronauts drank. What are we talking about here? the bottom end of the shaft? The slot in the pump drive is pretty wide in my 47, and the blade (tang?) is pretty slim, which yields a lot of slop. I always set the timing while holding the rotor counter-clockwise against its driving direction, and rotating the distributor until the points sparked, and it always ran dam good there. But what always bothered me was the distributor's wobble that so many chiefs have. ... the zen-masters tell me to quit looking at it.
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