honda man,
thanks for the response. its good to know its not something i have to take care of right away. it doesn't fall out too often.
I tried adjusting the clutch before and it was not very inuitive to me. Lining the mark on the lever arm was difficult and there didn't seem to be much travel on the adjuster screw ('76cb550) on the side. I don't have trouble shifting, (except out of neutral when the bike is on the hot side)
It's mentioned you can back out the adjuster screw till it bottoms out then turn back 1/2 to 3/4 turns?? like I said, there doesn't feel like there's much play in that adjustment screw is there something I'm missing.
550 and 500 use different methods of clutch adjustment (and its usually done wrong!) Start by slackening the cable all the way, not just the handle bar end (you can check cable moves freely at the same time) On 550, right side lower clutch cover, a 10mm locknut and a flat screw sticking through. This moves operating arm inside cover. Unscrewing screw moves internal lever closer to clutch. Wind it backwards(unscrew, counter clock) til it touches and turn back in about1/4 to 1/2 turn, lock up locknut and adjust cable at the cover end.
since i'm still new to this game I don't intend on tearing too far into a good working bike. Though, I would like to get the clutch adjusted the best I can though. Maybe I'll replace the clutch plates and assorted elements in the HOT 2 or 3 weeks of the summer.
my next tasks are to check the point gaps and set the timing, replace fork oil (twice 2-3 weeks apart to flush it, I don't know when it was last done), get a 7/8" master cyclinder for dual disks hooked up and maybe stainless lines (depending on my budget), polish clean and arrest any small rust spots and maybe take care of cleaning and arresting any rust on the bottoms of fenders.
Last spring I did tappet adjustments for the first time and replaced the breaker plate and set the timing. put on a set of new dunlops, ( great recomendation HondaMan), tubes, and a new rubber tire strip to replace the strips of duct tape inside the rim, (with tire irons even.) bought a grease gun and greased my nipple for the swing-arm, replaced the clutch and throttle cables, had the carbs synched by a friendly mechanic , ( one of the adjustment screws had become loose and it was all out of wack), oil change, oil screen replacement, snapped my first bolt on the oil pan and order a complete replacemen bolts set from Western Hills Honda, new air filter, of course spark plugs, rebuilt dual disk calipers, new pads from honda (came with the needed anti squeak nylon waser), new bleeder screws for calipers, replace the oil seal on gear shift, learned to pay attention to how things come off when I removed the front sprocket, (thanks for the help on getting it back on guys), clean a faulty solenoid switch for electric start, cleaned some wiring with waiting for a new plenum box i needed before the carb synchronization. I had to take so much stuff off to get in out and the on again anyhow.
i can't wait tll its a lttle warmer and i can get into my unheated garage more often and tear into it before the spring is in full force.
peace,
jason