[Ducati] Removing Crankshaft

Rich Roberts bigredxrunner at yahoo.com
Sun Dec 30 21:21:50 EST 2007


Get over it, there are many of us who felt the same way til we did it the first time. It is not that hard ,we got through it witout having anyone more expert than ourselves in the garage. Use a digital camera, take lots of pictures and notes and label parts as you remove them noting which rod went where etc etc. be methodical and keep your work area clean. Rich

Barry <musical at interbaun.com> wrote:  Thank you all for your advise. I must admit I am feeling to intimidated and
uncomfortable to split the case, if I was working with some one who had
experience like you guys I could learn and push my limits that much further
next time. But up here in Canada there isn't much around for Duc shops, in
fact the closest one is 300 miles away from where I am, and since they are
the only ones that keep stock, they charge incredibly high, and they are not
willing to lend any advise, and they are so busy they can never help unless
the bike sits at there shop for a month, and there goes my race week ends.


Any ways I have learned enough to do the top end maintenance, like shim
clearances and cam belts, I know I can keep my bike healthy and strong for
the race track. So to make a long story short, I will drop the motor (
gently ) and send the whole case to Guy Martin, along with the heads, from
that point I feel confident getting everything back together.

When I have the motor back together I would like to look at throttle body
synchronization and other little adjustments just to have a good running
race bike. Thanks again all.

Barry


On 12/30/07 9:06 AM, "Dave Weaver" wrote:

> I'm pretty sure you should have some preload on the main bearings. I
> know that's how we set up the race engines and it's also how the shop
> manual says to set up the stock ones too. As it was explained to me the
> preload stops the crank from being too loose after the cases have heated
> up and expanded. Honestly, properly shimming the crank is something you
> won't easily be able to do yourself simply due to not having the proper
> tools and shims. It's not that it's a hard thing to do it just requires
> some stuff the average shop doesn't have. If there is a shop near by
> that does Ducati engines it would be easiest and fastest to just pay
> them to do it. If not I'm sure we can walk you through it.
> 
> DaveW 
> 
> 
> 
> Rich Roberts wrote:
>> In its most basic form end play is the amount of side to side looseness in
>> crank as it is held in place by the main crank bearings which are thrust
>> bearings, you need a little end play, too little and crank is tight in the
>> bearings as those bearings have all their looseness taken up by the tightness
>> of two halves of cases. Shims is how you get the right amount of looseness.
>> If you do not know how this is done you do not have a shop manual. I am sure
>> I have my old shop manual around here somewhere, perhaps someone could scan
>> and email the appropriate pages. i would not split cases without at least
>> some good working knowledge of how to set crank endplay. To do so is kind of
>> missing something good you can do while cases are apart. Haynes I do not
>> think is as good a substitute for factory shop manual which actually is
>> pretty good. Sure they waste paper in 4 languages or something. Rich
>> 
>> 
> 
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