I'm struggling to realize and understand which direction these circlips go in pertaining to the flat side and chamfered side. I MOST DEFINITELY do not want to install them incorrectly, less I find myself right back in this same situation. So, can someone help me here. I do better by looking at photos, so I've attached a screenshot of the parts fiche with pointers.
I'll see if I have a shaft of those that I can take pix of tonight: I think I have 6 trannys around here(!) - the kind with gears, that is...
In the meantime a general rule: if the gear next to the spacer is free to spin on the shaft, the rounded side of the spacer faces it. This lets the oil seep in and prevents suction from pulling the spacer against the rotating part, as flat-to-flat surfaces under light closure pressure will push oil to the surface of such interfaces, then causing a suction that pushes them together. That's how the troubles start!
The tranny part absolutely had me dying, I literally had tears in my eyes from laughing so hard lol.
On a more serious note - I want to clarify - when you say 'spacer' are you referring to the circlip?
And if you were able to help me by sending pics, I would be so very grateful - I'll donate to the forum extra next month on top of my monthly donation!
I had to spend last evening taking care of some dogs, arf...it seems a couple of our neighbors suddenly had to go out of town and my wife volunteered to take care of their pups for a few days, so I have to 'pitch in' to help walk everyone (and tonight). When I get back from that, I'll dig thru some more of the gearboxes: I have a K7 set in there somewhere amongst the (7 or 8 ) others.
The 'spacer' is just a round washer-like gizmo that has teeth on the inside of the hole so it won't spin on the shaft. While most of them were bronze, Honda switched to using cast iron in some of the K7/8 and F2/3 engines, seemingly at random. Those with the iron bushings inside some of the gears (instead of the bronze bushings) usually have iron spacers, too, so you could possibly have 2 kinds of spacers now as you have more than one tranny
on hand.
Edit: Later (dogs are sleeping!!)
Here is a couple of shots of the assembled F2 mainshaft at the 5th-gear end. The spacer in this one is an iron type, not the bronze type, so it is black and on the far side of the snapring. 5th gear is on the far (right) end in these pix and 4th is closer to you. The spacers I've mentioned would be placed onto the mainshaft on the far side of this one's 5th gear, in between the gear and the bearing on the end. This shaft has one, though, so it fit together as-is.
While hard to see here, the flat side of the snapring is toward you, and the rounded side of it toward the spacer washer's flat side. The rounded side of the spacer washer is toward the (far) 5th gear on the end of the shaft. Note that this is always the same situation in the several places on these 2 shafts where clips and spacers are used: there is a non-sliding gear in each place that is mated with a sliding gear to select the different drive ratios. Some lock together with dogs and slots: the 5th gear uses splines and gear teeth.
If your shaft has spacers (or needs them) they will go on the opposite side of this 5th gear, in between it and the ball bearing. Normally there will be no binding occurring when the proper spacer(s) are installed there. Those spacers will push the 5th gear (toward you in the picture) toward the clutch end of this shaft while at the same time ensuring the inside teeth of this 5th gear will engage fully with the sliding 4th gear, which is closest to you in these shots. This is where the "3mm minimum" rule comes into play: there must be at least 3mm of engagement when these 2 gears are meshed in top gear.