Monday 30 September 2024

WELCOME to my blog about restoring (mainly) vintage overhead camshaft AJS motorcycles

 

Apologies to anyone that has come to this page expecting to see exclusively vintage AJS motorcycles .....scroll down the page a bit and you will find plenty of them. However, I ran out of AJSs to restore and I'm now working on early cammy Velocettes.

In 2023 I started the restoration of 2 early Velocette KTTs plus another Mk 1 OHC cammy special - a few details about each of these bikes can be found here and here

Quite a lot of work has been done on these bikes over the past 16 months and the INDEX PAGE provides links in chronological order of the project so far.

I have 3 rolling chassis up together - see here - and have been working on many smaller details - saddles, tanks, steering dampers, steering locks etc. This work is just about complete and I've recently started work on gearboxes, clutches and positive stop mechanisms.

Work on the gearboxes and various repairs to castings are underway (see here) and while waiting for some laser welding to be completed I have started - and just about completed, rejuvenation of 6x 7-plate clutches.



This sub-project has gone relatively smoothly - more details here.

During the last 4 years I have posted quite a lot of information and to aid navigation the "Labels" section on the right side of this page lists the various projects.

The labels marked "INDEX" give a link to a page that provides a complete list and links to all of the separate sub-projects related to that main project.

Alternatively, scroll down this page and see what's here...

When I started this blog I already owned (and still own) a 500cc AJS R10


that I've been riding for many years and wanted an early 350cc bike. I bought one at a Bonhams auction; this is what I brought home....

....a bit of work was needed to bring it to back to life 

Full details of the restoration can be found here.

During the restoration of the K7 I figured that I could put an early overhead camshaft Velocette cylinder, cylinder head and cambox onto the crankcases of an AJS 350cc engine from 1931, convert it to chain-driven OHC and make an engine that looks like a K7 but has a Velocette top-end. I had a 1928 350cc AJS sidevalve that I had bought on eBay and used that to create the AJcette ....giving credit to both manufacturers.

It looks pretty similar to the K7 and to demonstrate that there really are 2 bikes, here they are both together.


Details of the AJcette project can be found here.

I have quite a lot of early Mk1 OHC Velocette parts and after completing the AJcette I decided to use some of these to make a replica of a one-off bike that AJS built in 1929/1930 for an attempt on the world speed record. The original is a huge V-Twin beast that started out with a naturally-aspirated engine but, having failed to gain the record, was supercharged ...and again failed. The bike ended up in Tasmania for many years and, after being repatriated to the UK and restored, it is now in the National Motorcycle Museum.

This is what the original looked like:

and this is my recreation.

 

 

Like the AJcette, the V-Twin uses Mk 1 OHC Velocette cylinder components. The full story of how this bike was built can be found in the links here.

There is also a 14 minute edited Youtube summary of how these bikes came about here and a longer unedited version here.

In January 2022 I started the restoration of a 1933 AJS Trophy Model

and I have just completed (March 2023) this bike:

 

The Index Page for this project can be found here.

I also reported on a couple of my other projects ....vintage OHV Nortons


 and putting a Marshall supercharger onto my 1934 MG PA

 


I hope you find something of interest.

Velocette 7-Plate Clutches

As I mentioned previously, apart from the clutches that had come with some of the bikes, I had acquired a collection of clutch parts some years previously.


As I had 6 gearboxes, I aimed to get 6 working clutches out of these bits, although I only need 5 for my own projects.

Apart from a couple of 3-plate clutches, these were all 7-plate clutches. The construction of these is:

Backplate – Friction Plate – Plain Plate – Chainwheel – Plain Plate – Friction Plate – Front Plate.

There has probably been as much written about the idiosyncrasies of Velocette clutches as any other aspect of these bikes – and I'm not going to add to that volume of literature. I can understand why that is – clutch operation on other bikes of the era (and subsequently) were generally more intuitive – there was a pushrod passing through the gearbox mainshaft that pushed against the front plate holding the clutch springs and released the pressure on the plates when the clutch was operated. Simple. Velo clutches do not work like that  ….but please read about them somewhere else (but not the clutch adjustment procedure in the Haynes manual …it’s incorrect, as I (and many others) found out the hard way many years ago when I first owned a Velo).

However, there is one observation that I will make about Velo clutches: they must have been quite expensive to manufacture. For example, the clutch back plate (KC-1/25), shown below,


really is a work of art but would have required a lot of separate machining operations compared to a more conventional pushrod-operated clutch (see, for example, here and here which describe the clutch that I made for the AJS V-twin).

Among my collection of bits, I found 2 slightly different chainwheels whereas there is only one (part number KC-3/25) listed in both of my Spares Parts Lists which cover the years 1925 – 1931 and 1932 – 1934. There are 2 differences: the first is the width of the slotted rim at the outer edge in which one side is very slightly wider (on the right side of the sprocket shown below) than the other;

and there is a corresponding change to the bearing housing to move the bearing slightly more inboard. The 2 pictures below show both sides of the bearing housing in one of these chainwheels.


It is a small change but it has the effect of moving the location of the bearing on the backplate to be positioned more on the continuous section rather than the section with the 6 protruding tangs (that enter the front plate), ie a better design. The 2 changes go hand-in-hand to ensure the same position of the sprocket when the clutch is assembled so that chain alignment is unchanged. I can only assume that Velocette made this change without changing the part number ….unless someone knows differently? The other, presumably earlier, chainwheel is symmetrical.

The first step was to make an audit to order bits and pieces from both Grove Classics and Velo Spares Ltd. (the Velo Owners Club spares scheme). Various gearbox bits were ordered at the same time.

Before these arrived, I pressed out the clutch bearings from all the chainwheels so that I could clean them (and the filthy chainwheels) properly to assess what was useable.

Care must be taken to both extract and replace these bearings to avoid damage and, to this end, I machined a piece of round bar, shown below, to ensure that the pressing load is only applied to the bearing outer.


The smallest diameter is a loose fit on the inside of the bearing – just to locate it on-centre, whilst the intermediate diameter is a few thou less than the OD of the bearing to apply the pressing load. The shoulder is also relieved by around 0.005” so that load is not applied to the bearing inner.


And with the housing in the chainwheel supported by a thick steel tube


the bearings can be pushed out easily and without damage to either the chainwheel or the bearing.


New bearings are available from GroveClassics but it is worth preserving serviceable ones if possible.

All of the serviceable parts were degreased with cellulose thinners and then cleaned up in the tumbler overnight (except the bearings) before the new bits and pieces turned up.

There were new inserts (C-25) for chainwheels (22 in each chainwheel – 3 sets were required)

3 sets of new plates (4 for each clutch)


plus thrust bearings, oil-retaining shims, springs, thrust pins etc.


….it’s a bit like Christmas morning when you’re a child.

After a lot of cleaning, measuring, refitting good bearings and inserting new “corks” (they are not really corks but a modern replacement friction material) into the chainwheels I now have 6 good serviceable clutches.



There are still a couple of bits that I need to order but, in the meantime, they will have to occupy my milling machine table as all my other workspace is taken up with disassembled gearboxes.

And these are the bits left over:

I will keep the backplates, chainwheels and front plates for a period of time in case anyone wants one but the rest will go in the scrap bin.