Fast Eddie
VIP MEMBER
That’s progress?
I admire your optimism.
Just not as much as I admire your tenacity / obsession !
I admire your optimism.
Just not as much as I admire your tenacity / obsession !
Re oil in frame; couldn't some one have made some fins to weld up tp the front downtubes of the bike?I have a set o 920 barrels in my workshop that have had every other fin removed. I understand his was done for a sidecar cross outfit where the cooling demands allowed it, and it made it easier to get the mud out!
I bought them quite early in my project.
My Rickman has oil in the frame, which can get very hot and burn my thighs on occasion, so I would not be confident of using these barrels on a road racer.
However, my initial reason for not using them was based on the need to open out the Maney cases I had just bought! (and In the end I built a short stroke 750!)
I don’t think that’s necessary as frame tubes act as brilliant heat radiators anyway.Re oil in frame; couldn't some one have made some fins to weld up tp the front downtubes of the bike?
It's easy, sheet metal of a suitable gauge, drill an hole diameter of tube, cut in half and ....viola!
You clearly haven't touched an oil tank with your bare fingers after a very quick run high speed run or you wouldn't be making this statement!I don’t think that’s necessary as frame tubes act as brilliant heat radiators anyway.
??You clearly haven't touched an oil tank with your bare fingers after a very quick run high speed run or you wouldn't be making this statement!
I thought that Trabants were two-strokes..I have identified the cam belt used, its used on a VW Golf, Audi A3 or much to my amusement a Trabant
Most of them were two strokes, the last models had a VW Polo engine as a way of making the Trabant meet emissions limits.I thought that Trabants were two-strokes..![]()
Progress update
Took the cylinder head off the Merlin a couple of days ago (after measuring the cam timing, as the cam wheels are only held on tapers, no keys or dowels at all)
It came apart reasonable easily. Evident immediately that Alan and John (who were Merlin Engineering) had used an unmachined (or part machined) barrel casting. The barrels on the Merlin do not have the two outer rear 3/8" BSCY tapped holes, nether the counterbore on the rear through bolt holes or the oil drain hole. Also the front and center tapped holes are 3/8" UNF. The pushrod tunnels are unmachined.
It doesn't have the small holes drilled through between the bores either.
The shaft that take the cam drive across the engine and out the drive side (where the std cam usually lives) has a needle roller bearing in the extended bearing housing
I have identified the cam belt used, its used on a VW Golf, Audi A3 or much to my amusement a Trabant
Evening WaspHi dobba99 Hope you are keeping well,Any new progress updates available on Suzi ?
Evening Wasp
Progress is/has been slow this last year. I got the TTI box installed in the cradle and had to cut the splines in a Hooke joint for the gearchange shaft (TTI supplied the box with the gearchange shaft parallel instead of at the angle it should be at for the Mk3 installation)
The engine has its own problems that manifested itself upon closer inspection, the cam carriers/cam followers need work as the valve buckets (cam followers) display severe bucket tilt when the cam is revolved. This is because the buckets are not sufficiently supported throughout their travel (and the fact that the clearance when it was made was too wide) The method of valve adjustment is shim under bucket using a lash type cap on top of the valve stem. These caps show severe wear as the buckets had been rocking about when the engine was running, not good.
I am going to make new bucket carriers that will screw/bolt to the underneath of the cam carrier. These will be sized to use triumph triple valve buckets (lighter than the Hillman imp, i think, buckets Merlin used) I am also going to change the valve shim to 13mm dia instead of the lash cap type as they are far cheaper and readiliy available. This entails making different valve spring caps to hold the 13mm shim.
I had the engine in the frame to finalise the g/box assembly, chaincase, headsteady arrangement, petrol tank and timing belt case fitting.
All before the frame was dispatched for painting.
The crankcase has fitted studs bolting the case to the cradle (cradle and case holes reamed together and HT studs made to suit) G/box similar, stepped studs made to suit the cradle/box mounting holes
Primary case has had the oil seal boss machined down and a thinner oil seal fitted to clear the TTi sprocket/nut also the primary rear case has had to have a scallop machined out of the front provide clearance for the cambelt
Headsteady caused a few headaches as it has to use the studs that hold the cam carriers onto the head, longer studs needed/made
This also meant that the petrol tank had to have its underside modified to clear the head and the headsteady
Standard Coil bracket was binned (coils too close to the engine) and a more compact version made to use the std coils in the same area, just further away from the head.
Even the oil feed supply (rocker oil pipe) to the cams took a couple of days to sort out as using braided hose and fittings just didn't look right, so made a compact manifold out of stainless
Along the way in autumn i rebuilt a 1956 ES2 for a club member that had been ripped off by a 'restorer' (a Paint and polish merchant) So bad, it was a death trap, he still won't tell me who did it.
Modified quite a number of harley starters for Mk3s, Sold a few Upgraded/modified prestolite starters. Installed a few master cylinder sleeve kits for owners
Did couple of head gaskets for other owners new to Commandos etc etc.
Got another Mk3 arriving tomorrow for its sprag etc sorting.
Keeps me busy....
So, has anybody tried an 8 valve head?
'Classic Bike' magazine, June 1988, has an article on 8 valve Commando.Hi,
I‘m in awe of your work and commitment to Nortons.
The question I have to ask is what is the point? No, I’m not being rude, it is a serious questions and I am really impressed but I was under the impression that OHC and DOHC in particular was to allow higher rpm than is possible with a pushrod engine which is limited by the inertia of the valve train. As has been discussed in great detail in a recent thread, the maximum rpm a Commando can endure is limited by its basic engine design, particularly it‘s bottom end. What rpm are you hoping to run the engine at?
Interestingly one of the most impressive bikes (for what it is) that I have ridden was my late mate‘s T140V (small tank) with a Norish 8 valve head (not sure if there were other engine modifications). It absolutely flew and as I have a similar T140V (breadbox) I could be quite sure of the performance increase. Of course it managed this with standard pushrod design.
So, has anybody tried an 8 valve head? I’m told that engine geometry has a lot to do with what gains in power are available.
Can you direct me to any articles etc on the Merlin engine?
Anyway, good luck with the project and keep posting.
regards
Alan
Norton comissioned Piper engineering to design and make an 8 valve head to fit the standard barrel. When tested it didnt perform any better than the 4 valve std head so wasnt adopted. Les emery got hold of it and had Pete Lovell go over it. He found the valve springs were far too strong and other stuff. When he got it going, fitted with the softest cam ever, he found it a very tractable and torquie motor that was deceptively fast. It was road tested by one of the bike mags of the day.So, has anybody tried an 8 valve head?