YM 3000 Flywheel

   / YM 3000 Flywheel #12  
Thanks Car Doc,
No surfaceing allowed, I can clearly see lathe tool marks on this one, makes for a new flywheel purchase I guess. Give Hoye a call, see if one is available, thanks for your time and effort,
Chris

Welcome Chris,

If they cant come up with one and if you are faced with a do or die situation there are flywheel shims available. Lots of 4 and 6cyl Toyota's use them for instance.

I know you can turn the flywheel to suit and as far as the shims dimensions like I say if its a do or die just drilling new holes should be a piece of cake and with your lathe skills the od/id should not pose a real problem either. jmho

If I can help further I will and I may be able to come up with a shim or 2 for sake of discussion and application if you have your crank end dimensions for me. :thumbsup:

My gears are working so here is something to ponder-with the flywheel and clutch assy / off the machine completely assembled AS IS old parts.

A person could simply take measurements of the finger tips to flywheel etc and then by pressing them see how much distance they need to move in order to disengage the disc. edit: As a rule the fingers are usually almost flat when assembled maybe a bit on the convex side but only a little. The fingers get more convex (twords the tranny) as the disc etc wears and it takes more movement to disengage and it has less clamping force also as the result of the wear.

I can see it in my head using a press so if that helps great. In my world there is always a way to fix something. I am somewhat famous for the ability to fix anything no matter what it is.
 
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   / YM 3000 Flywheel
  • Thread Starter
#13  
Thanks for the thoughts Car Doc,
I have pressure plate, clutch disc, throw out bearing in transit now from Hoye. Thinking the same way, there is a pressure plate finger to clutch face measurement in the manual. Thinking about compairing that measurement assembled to what the old parts measure assembled and decide what to do. Shims between the end of the crank and face of the flywheel are looking like the best answer. Because there doesn't seam to be a min/max on the step machined in the flywheel, I might end up calling Hoye and asking what a new one measures to see where this one is. ( that is if they have one ) What ever it is out of spec, cut that off the outer surface of the flywheel and add shims that thickness. .050 isn't much, and it would be good to get it right the first try. The large stationary engines I'm used to working on were much more forgiving in this area. ( cat 3512's and 3516's, Detroit V20, Waukesha ) Thanks for the help,
Chris
 
   / YM 3000 Flywheel
  • Thread Starter
#14  
Yes California,
I miss her to, both Van and her brother were good honest people to deal with. Hope they both do well in the future.
Chris
 
   / YM 3000 Flywheel #15  
Chris,

Welcome. To further clarify the shims proper installation would be needed only if you did not have enough travel/adjustment in the fork or if the fork was in jeopardy of going over center on the t/o brg. And only for adjustment purposes not added clutch clamping pressure. (I know you already get that but just saying so I know we are on the same page)

The machine work I see you needing is simply to machine down the boss the pp is sitting on. I would probably take a few thousandths off the face also to make sure they are true to each other fwtw. And that is from my recollection of the last Yanmar I had down the step on it was cut into and below level of the flywheel face the clutch disc engaged.
 
   / YM 3000 Flywheel
  • Thread Starter
#16  
Parts got here last night. I've got the flywheel off and on the bench. Thinking about bolting the clutch/pressure plate stack together and measuring the difference. Come up with a plan of action from there. Can see the clutch disc is .050 thicker to start with. See how much distance I've gained with the new parts. Looking at the step left by the tool bit where the flywheel was cut, I can measure about .015 with a depth mic. If need be, will take the .015 off the outer face where the pressure plate bolts on, and shim between the flywheel and crank that same .015. I have shim that thick here, easy job to make one. That should place the flywheel/pressure plate/clutch disc in the proper position again. Another fun repair of a VN recon. They did some strange stuff overthere "rebuilding" these things. Thanks Car Doc for the help and thoughts, hope I'm pointed in the right direction.
chris
 
   / YM 3000 Flywheel #17  
A little goes a long ways in a pressure plate considering they normally only move around .125" anyway at the disc so its all in leverage and how you use it.
 
   / YM 3000 Flywheel
  • Thread Starter
#18  
The new stack measured .300 thicker than the old parts stack. That's a bunch, almost 5/16" thicker. ( that is measured with all of the pressure plate bolts in and tight ) Near as I can tell the difference is coming from the pressure plate and not the disc. Thinking I'm going to bolt this thing back together and give it a go. The .015 cut on the disc surface is nothing compaired to the fresh pressure plate and disc stack. Most likely it's going to work out fine unless something else is messed up. Now the fun starts,
Chris
 
   / YM 3000 Flywheel #19  
The new stack measured .300 thicker than the old parts stack. That's a bunch, almost 5/16" thicker. ( that is measured with all of the pressure plate bolts in and tight ) Near as I can tell the difference is coming from the pressure plate and not the disc. Thinking I'm going to bolt this thing back together and give it a go. The .015 cut on the disc surface is nothing compaired to the fresh pressure plate and disc stack. Most likely it's going to work out fine unless something else is messed up. Now the fun starts,
Chris

Sounds real good Chris! Who knows they probably machined the old PP instead of replacing it.

We ran into that in my business years ago with rebuilt clutches they would just re-machine them and I think probably every other one we put in had some sort of problem.

We switched gears and went with all new assembly's or wouldn't do the job at all if someone is cheaping out.

I cant even remember that last clutch I put in that ever had issues they are bullet proof now days. good luck
 
   / YM 3000 Flywheel
  • Thread Starter
#20  
I think your guess is right on the money. Disc on the old pressure plate is .090 thinner, almost a sure thing it was machined. Mix that with some used and tired springs and there is the .300. Mostly together now, but won't get to test for awhile. Keep finding things that need to be fixed. FEL mount has mixed bolts, mixed sizes as well, stripped threads in the casting. Have to drill and tap the casting between the bell housing and trans to take the same bolts, Willl change the 14 mm to 5/8" X 11 because that is what I have the taps for. I'll use grade 8 allen heads because of the load on them. California and I had the same dealer in Sacramento, now out of business. They were great people, wasn't anything they wouldn't do for you. I'd buy from them again, no regrets. They talked about quality problems with the folks in VN doing the rebuilds. They even made a few trips over there to try to fix the problem. Can see exactly what they were talking about now, see what drove them out of business. Have to wonder what is next ??
chris
 

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