Worn clutch?
Dave Daniels
dwaynedaniels at sbcglobal.net
Tue May 1 11:49:29 PDT 2007
I had to replace mine because it started slipping. The bike was put back together from being a basket case after being wrecked. It's evident that it was ridden hard and put away wet. The odometer had less than 4500 at the time but I question whether that's true. Anyway, it's highly unusual, from what I gather, for a GPZ clutch to die so young. In any event, it just started slipping. I'd be going along just fine, but when I would get on the throttle, it would slip. And to this day, you can't convince me that it had anything to do with the oil I was using. As a side note: Don't use Gunk engine flush to clean out the engine.
john leonard <jlmdx at hotmail.com> wrote: Wow, you guys are quick.
I use standard auto-grade Castrol, but have for the last 7 years. The
clutch "I thought" used to engage around the half-way lever position, but I
may be wrong - I've been riding 3 different bikes.
I was using 10w-30 in past years becuase I did cold weather riding - mostly
short stop-and-go trips. But this season I switched to 15W-40. I change
the oil and filter frequently.
Has anyone actually needed to replace their GPZ clutch? And if so, do you
wait for slipping / odd tach movements, or just a total no-go state?
john
>What flavor of oil are you using? Regular car oils (although probably not
>15w40?) have additives that can cause wet clutches to slip. Motorcycle
>oils
>and heavy-duty diesel oils that are popular for bikes (ie, Delo 400) don't
>have these additives.
>
>Not to start an oil thread but I like Shell Rotella T, 5W40 full-synthetic.
>
>
>On 5/1/07, john leonard wrote:
>>
>>I've changed the clutch fluid this week, and loaded the case with 15W -
>>40.
>>Is this too heavy?
>>
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