NCY clutch dragging ...
Moderator: Modern Buddy Staff
- dana
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- Joined: Fri Jan 15, 2010 2:41 am
- Location: Salt Lake City
NCY clutch dragging ...
The clutch on my tuned Buddy seems to drag a little. I can feel it disengage on deceleration once the revs drop a lot. Aftermarket NCY clutch, NCY varistor, etc. This has noticeably more deceleration drag than my totally stock Buddy.
What do you think? Heavier clutch springs? If I remember correctly, I just used the springs that came with the NCY clutch.
Is this an issue anyone else has experienced? Not that it's really that big a deal, but engine breaking on an auto scoot just feels odd.
Thx
What do you think? Heavier clutch springs? If I remember correctly, I just used the springs that came with the NCY clutch.
Is this an issue anyone else has experienced? Not that it's really that big a deal, but engine breaking on an auto scoot just feels odd.
Thx
- SYMbionic Duo
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- Location: Minneapolis
I am having the same issue. I also used the springs that came with the clutch instead of 1500 (yellow) springs that i usually use.
I plan on swapping them out, but it will have to wait til my stella is up and running again. (never monkey with a bike that runs when the backup is down)
-duo
I plan on swapping them out, but it will have to wait til my stella is up and running again. (never monkey with a bike that runs when the backup is down)
-duo
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- Lostmycage
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If you're having too much engine braking then the Contra spring is too stiff. If your clutch is disengaging too late, your shoe springs are too light. If it feels like it never fully disengages, then your retaining nut isn't on correctly and you're grinding away the inside of your clutch bell (you'd want to look into that last one quicker than the others).
Check out Scoot Richmond's new site: My awesome local shop.
- dana
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- Joined: Fri Jan 15, 2010 2:41 am
- Location: Salt Lake City
Thx. Perfect description. Much appreciated.Lostmycage wrote:If you're having too much engine braking then the Contra spring is too stiff. If your clutch is disengaging too late, your shoe springs are too light. If it feels like it never fully disengages, then your retaining nut isn't on correctly and you're grinding away the inside of your clutch bell (you'd want to look into that last one quicker than the others).
- Tocsik
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Is "too much engine braking" a bad thing? I like the 1500 rpm contra spring but if engine braking puts a strain on anything I would go back to the 1K.
I also kept the pill springs in the NCY racing clutch that it came with. I have the blue clutch so I don't really know what those shoe springs are rated (everything is blue in there!). I have a set of 1500 shoe springs (yellow) I could try, too. I ran those in the stock clutch and it was a good set-up.
Thanks LMC.
I also kept the pill springs in the NCY racing clutch that it came with. I have the blue clutch so I don't really know what those shoe springs are rated (everything is blue in there!). I have a set of 1500 shoe springs (yellow) I could try, too. I ran those in the stock clutch and it was a good set-up.
Thanks LMC.
- dana
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- Location: Salt Lake City
I guess it depends on rider preference. Personally for me, it feels strange not having a clutch to influence throttle and braking. On roadrace bikes we actually play with ECU programming and slipper clutch adjustment to influence/reduce engine braking. AND we still have a clutch.Tocsik wrote:Is "too much engine braking" a bad thing?
I didn't realize how much it bugged me until I started riding my wife's stock Buddy last week. My Buddy has a cylinder kit and a bunch of compression, so it's a lot more noticeable. "Coasting" in traffic feels pretty strange ... either on or off.
I'll try out some other springs. Seems like there are some good, knowledgeable auto tuners on this list, so I thought I'd ask. Thx again.
- Lostmycage
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I found I liked a lighter contra spring and the middle tension shoe springs. I also highly preferred the retaining nut fully tightened.
Check out Scoot Richmond's new site: My awesome local shop.
- dana
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- Joined: Fri Jan 15, 2010 2:41 am
- Location: Salt Lake City
Thx. I'll start with the retaining nut. Always start with the simple stuff... Learned that the hard way. lolLostmycage wrote:I found I liked a lighter contra spring and the middle tension shoe springs. I also highly preferred the retaining nut fully tightened.
So stock contra spring and yellow shoe springs, maybe? Is the color coding of the springs consistent across brands? I've got a bunch of Dr. Pulley springs, but I don't know that the weights are marked on the package.
- Lostmycage
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Sadly, no. They are very inconsistent across brands.dana wrote:Thx. I'll start with the retaining nut. Always start with the simple stuff... Learned that the hard way. lolLostmycage wrote:I found I liked a lighter contra spring and the middle tension shoe springs. I also highly preferred the retaining nut fully tightened.
So stock contra spring and yellow shoe springs, maybe? Is the color coding of the springs consistent across brands? I've got a bunch of Dr. Pulley springs, but I don't know that the weights are marked on the package.
Check out Scoot Richmond's new site: My awesome local shop.