Picked up a set of Bridgestone BT46s in the mail this week. 19x3.25F and 18x4.00R. Haven't seen too many reviews on the updated design yet, so hopefully they live up to their predecessors. I need to finish truing up my wheels before I can get these mounted.
I also worked on my external oil lines a bit this week. I tapped an AN tee fitting to accept some brass set-screws which I drilled thru to match the ID of the stock restrictor orifices in the cylinder dowels. Installed the set-screws with blue loctite, though they don't really have anywhere else to go.
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I bent up the hard-lines from the head to the tee. I need some sort of bracket to hold the body of the flexible hose securely at the screw between the head and jugs.
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I would like to pressure test the lines before I start the bike up to avoid any surprises, so I'm thinking about maybe mixing up some silicone jeweler's putty to make a temporary seals on the oiling holes under the cam so I can pressurize the lines and make sure it holds tight at 60psi.
I also picked up new bolts for the cam sprocket - I didn't like how little contact area the stock bolt has on a slotted sprocket. M7 flange bolts are a little uncommon. I initially found some Gr5 Ti flange bolts online - I guess I should have looked at the bolt standard a little closer (DIN6921) because the heads on these are comically oversized and almost hit the chain tunnel. I also didn't like that the threads were cut all the way up to the head. You can see on the stock bolt there is a thicker cross-section under the head.
Thanks to some past investigative work by PeWe in an old thread, I located a NOS set of flange bolts from a Suzuki that make me feel a lot more warm and fuzzy.
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After slicing up the molds, I decided to rework the design. Too much material usage and too long of build times for my taste. Now the mold sections are just 3mm thick walls with the same splits. This cut material usage considerably to 25% and with the addition of a larger nozzle diameter and hot-end brings the per section print time from ~40hrs down to about 3hrs.
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Got my first part off the printer today. A few issues on the first couple of layers, but nothing I can't work around.
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The remainder of the workflow for the molds will go something like this:
- Epoxy "minor" mold sections together
- Match drill "major" mold sections to bolt and dowel together
- Stiffen molds with epoxy and glass on back-sides
- Apply thin layer of epoxy filler to mold surfaces
- Sand to smooth finish (up to 600gt)
- Seal mold surfaces
- Apply mold release
SolidWorks has a flattening feature which works OK - so I flattened out the tank surface to help make some estimates on material requirements. With some excess added for the flange and to account for the deformation in the mesh, it looks like I will need ~30"x30" of material per layer for the upper section.
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Plenty to keep me busy for the next couple of weeks, that's for sure!