At 1:04:43 I can see a dot and "TOP" on the ring just right of the 6-o'clock position. You flipped it back and forth, but it ended up the right way up. Really should use a ring file machine or make a jig to get the cuts perfectly square, otherwise you cause problems. Doesn't matter how you clock the rings because they'll rotate the way they "want" to anyway once it's running and breaks in. Good video though.
Well acording to the book and other shops I have inquired to they just simply knock it in and out cold and don't say anything about heating it up first? So I like your thinking outside the box and I have done that in similar situations but for this I don't think heating the cylinder first for removal would do anything much as for they are both made out of the same material so the heat expansion rate is the or would be the same? Just my take on it? Maybe I will try it next time though,
@@jessesvintagegarage765 Heating the same material will make the gap bigger too. Just imagine you're zooming in on a schematic. The only time heating doesn't help is if the inner material grows faster.
Great video with alot of info. This will be my next project, top end on my TR6. Things will go much better after watching your video.
We had a real mess with this bike but it really worked out and turned out great, thanks for the get comment and glad this will help.
At 1:04:43 I can see a dot and "TOP" on the ring just right of the 6-o'clock position. You flipped it back and forth, but it ended up the right way up. Really should use a ring file machine or make a jig to get the cuts perfectly square, otherwise you cause problems. Doesn't matter how you clock the rings because they'll rotate the way they "want" to anyway once it's running and breaks in. Good video though.
That's scary I always heat the barrel in the oven first.RMM
Well acording to the book and other shops I have inquired to they just simply knock it in and out cold and don't say anything about heating it up first? So I like your thinking outside the box and I have done that in similar situations but for this I don't think heating the cylinder first for removal would do anything much as for they are both made out of the same material so the heat expansion rate is the or would be the same? Just my take on it? Maybe I will try it next time though,
Good program. Easy to understand. Great camera angles. Hope you guys keep going. Thank you for the info.
@@jessesvintagegarage765 Heating the same material will make the gap bigger too. Just imagine you're zooming in on a schematic. The only time heating doesn't help is if the inner material grows faster.