Basket Cases

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David Lahey
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Post by David Lahey »

I acquired another Basket Case recently and while it still had both wheels in position, the rear wheel was not keen to rotate, making moving the Basket Case around a high energy event.
This Basket Case is the remains of a :Bultaco: Model 137 Alpina that had sat for a very long time in the shade, but at the seaside.
This photo shows why the rear wheel didn't want to turn. The brake linings had parted company with the brake shoes and the chrome drum lining had formed corrosion blisters that had grabbed the brake linings.
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The Basket Case appears to have been parked under a Casuarina tree
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Greg Harding
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Post by Greg Harding »

Hi Everyone,
David Lahey wrote:
Greg Harding wrote:Hi Everyone,
Kurt wrote:Other than calculating the change in compression I didn't measure the exact shape of the chamber Greg.
It would be interesting if there would be significant gains to be made by the shape of the squish/combustion chamber on a Trials bike given the low revs at which they operate.

I don't have a split head yet Greg although some might say so.
I am interested as to why you have lobotomised your head though for that silver tray.

There would be a reason why the Two heads are different, my guess is the DT with much higher gearing needed more torque to get off the mark? :yamaha TY 175s need more bottom end when labouring up hill especially after a really tight turn that limits run up speed. My question in part was: Can the same improvement be made using the original head and that is why I was curious about to volume and shape?

Well I don't have a fancy profile gauge like yours Greg, but I do have something else to add to the story.
Here are photos of the two heads in question. A DT175A ( :yamaha model 443) head and :yamaha TY175 ( :yamaha model 1N4) head.
Measured with my eyeballs, the combustion chamber appears to be the same shape on both and the squish band has the same angle and width on both. Where they differ is in the step up between the squish band and the gasket surface. The TY175 head has a 1.5 mm step and the DT175 head has a 1.2 mm step. So to answer your question, yes you could replicate the compression benefit of the DT175 head by machining the gasket surface on the TY175 head, as many people have done. An even more common trick with the TY175 is to use a thinner-than-standard head gasket or no head gasket to increase the compression ratio.
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After pondering this for some time, my conclusion is that I don't like the look of mismatched head and cylinder and I don't feel the need for a spare spark plug. So I have made an arbour in my trusty Brunswick engine lathe for machining a :yamaha TY 175 head to match the higher compression DT175 head:
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First of all is to get the head to spin true:
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First cut:
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Final cut removing a total of 0.3 mm:
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David Lahey
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Re: Basket Cases

Post by David Lahey »

Excellent!
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Re: Basket Cases

Post by Kurt »

Looking good Greg, I will be interested in your review of the difference in power/torque of the TY175 to see if you are of the same opinion as I was.
Are you going to match the DT compression ratio or look at increasing even further more in line with modern engines?

It has always struck me as an odd choice to chrome plate the bores of the brake hubs on the :Bultaco:.
Obviously it gives greater wear resistance but at the expense of brake performance and also once you wear through the chrome you then have the brake shoe wearing away sections of the base metal at a much faster rate than the areas with chrome remaining.
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Re: Basket Cases

Post by David Lahey »

Kurt wrote:It has always struck me as an odd choice to chrome plate the bores of the brake hubs on the :Bultaco:.
Obviously it gives greater wear resistance but at the expense of brake performance and also once you wear through the chrome you then have the brake shoe wearing away sections of the base metal at a much faster rate than the areas with chrome remaining.

:Bultaco: did the chrome plated brake drums at a time when manufacturers were going to all sorts of extremes to make their bikes lighter and doing away with the steel or cast iron drum linings made the wheels on Sherpa Ts and Pursangs class-leading in terms of weight. The weight war had been started by :suzuki with their extreme lightweight works MX bikes and everyone else was playing catch-up.
Another notable example of extreme weight minimisation at the time was Husqvarna making the inner engine casings of their 250 MX bike from Magnesium. :ossa was pretty serious too and in 1974, the :ossa Phantom was the lightest production 250cc MX bike.
The brake drums wasn't the first time :Bultaco: dabbled with chrome plated aluminium. In 1969, they chrome plated the outer engine casings on Pursang and Matador. It wasn't a raging success and they went back to a polished aluminium finish.
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Re: Basket Cases

Post by Kurt »

A wealth of knowledge as always David.
I hadn't considered the overall weight side of things and also the lighter you can make your hub the better your suspension will react to bumps (probably not overly applicable to Trials due to the slow speeds).

Any Idea why :Bultaco: Chrome plated the aluminium cases, was it only a decorative feature?
It would have taken some serious effort to polish up the cases for chroming when the polished aluminium looks as good as it does.
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Re: Basket Cases

Post by David Lahey »

Kurt wrote:A wealth of knowledge as always David.
I hadn't considered the overall weight side of things and also the lighter you can make your hub the better your suspension will react to bumps (probably not overly applicable to Trials due to the slow speeds).

Any Idea why :Bultaco: Chrome plated the aluminium cases, was it only a decorative feature?
It would have taken some serious effort to polish up the cases for chroming when the polished aluminium looks as good as it does.

Sorry Kurt I don't know whey they plated the cases. It does seem weird. I've got some engine covers with plating so might take some photos and post them up to show what they looks like 50 years later.

As for the weight of trials bike wheels, I ran a :yamaha TY rear wheel on the back of my :kawasaki KT250 while I was restoring the :kawasaki KT rear wheel and it was quite interesting to feel the difference, and :yamaha TY wheels are not the lightest twinshock trials wheels. Most noticeable in stream-bed rock riding. The :kawasaki KT250 has the same wheel hubs as the early 1970s :kawasaki KS125 trail bike.
Some very nice rides I've felt over streambed rocks are on mid-late 1970s Spanish trials bikes and these have the lightest trials wheels of the 1970s. The :montesa Cota 348 and late model :Bultaco: Sherpa Ts have a beautiful ride. Some earlier Spanish trials bikes hubs were not so light. The first :montesa Cota 247 had monstrous wheel hubs and the :Bultaco: Sherpa Ts from 1969 to about 1974 had "very strong" rear hubs and big diameter rear axles. :ossa took the wheel weight reduction theme seriously on the :ossa MAR using a 12mm rear axle when it came out in 1972/3.
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TY80 Oil Scraper

Post by Kurt »

One for the Yamaha TY80 Anoraks

What is the function of the Oil scraper No 17 in the parts manual?

It appears to me as if it would redirect oil flung from the clutch gear through a passage to the gear set on the other side of the crankcase but this would be in an oil bath anyway.

TY80 Oil Scraper.PNG
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David Lahey
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Re: TY80 Oil Scraper

Post by David Lahey »

Kurt wrote:One for the Yamaha TY80 Anoraks

What is the function of the Oil scraper No 17 in the parts manual?

It appears to me as if it would redirect oil flung from the clutch gear through a passage to the gear set on the other side of the crankcase but this would be in an oil bath anyway.

I don't remember seeing inside that casing when I had a ty80 but I'll have a stab at what it's for. Maybe the wiper is to limit the amount of oil thrown forwards by the clutch gear teeth.
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Chrome plated aluminium engine casings

Post by David Lahey »

Kurt's post reminded me that I hadn't yet posted photos of the dreaded chrome plated :Bultaco: engine outer casings.
In 1969, :Bultaco: shiny plated the outer engine casings of some models. I have no idea why, but I do know that the plating eventually starts to flake off and I haven't found a way to make them look as pretty as polished aluminium looks.
These :Bultaco: primary drive casings were made close in time. The plain aluminium casing I'm thinking was made in 1967 or 68 and the chrome plated casing in 1969. I don't think either of them has ever been refurbished so it is a pretty good comparison of how well they have fared over the years.
The problem with the flaking chrome is that the chrome is much harder than the aluminium so if you use dry blast to remove the plating, the aluminium will get damaged. If you try and use electrical current to remove the plating, the aluminium will dissolve way faster than the plating. In one photo I've pointed to a spot where I stripped off the plating with an abrasive disc. It worked fine there, but would be useless on the bits that are recessed, like the :Bultaco: logo.
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