perhaps precision forged powdered metal perhaps.....
I suppose it may be diecast but I don't think so.
The piece is a snail that has a double d hole thru the center..... if I am carrying you too fast that simply means in hillbilly that it fits on a round shaft that has been slabbed on opposite sides
now the snail head is what pushes the clutch pushrod and it's tail is cammed over by the cable actuated clutch mechanism
Problem is they seem to make this one a bit on the puny side even though there is room for more meat...... which means when performance is increased beyond the pressure plate springs ability to keep the plates stuck together...... the additional needed spring pressure keeps these worrisome pieces splitting into two pieces at the two thinnest sections
such a shame.......
any suggestions....... even basic ones such as ID'ing the metal content prior to determining how to weld it would be good since it's not just your run of the mill tool steel...... I don't think so anyhow.
It's quite hard and quite strong even though not strong enough to work much harder than originally intended....... looks like the engineers nailed this piece just right and saved the company who knows how many bucks
It would be cool if having to CNC out a new stronger part wasn't the only next possible step
thanks
________
iolite vaporizer review
I suppose it may be diecast but I don't think so.
The piece is a snail that has a double d hole thru the center..... if I am carrying you too fast that simply means in hillbilly that it fits on a round shaft that has been slabbed on opposite sides
now the snail head is what pushes the clutch pushrod and it's tail is cammed over by the cable actuated clutch mechanism
Problem is they seem to make this one a bit on the puny side even though there is room for more meat...... which means when performance is increased beyond the pressure plate springs ability to keep the plates stuck together...... the additional needed spring pressure keeps these worrisome pieces splitting into two pieces at the two thinnest sections
such a shame.......
any suggestions....... even basic ones such as ID'ing the metal content prior to determining how to weld it would be good since it's not just your run of the mill tool steel...... I don't think so anyhow.
It's quite hard and quite strong even though not strong enough to work much harder than originally intended....... looks like the engineers nailed this piece just right and saved the company who knows how many bucks
It would be cool if having to CNC out a new stronger part wasn't the only next possible step
thanks
________
iolite vaporizer review
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