Lord...I wouldn't worry about failure. I still believe the Hyvo set up is a much more stout means of power transfer than the OEM pieces. I would think M3 was using the old CR750 chains at one point so maybe that is more the comparative to the Hyvo. I would keep an eye on the tensioner unit. Anyway... after all your time and investment you're only going to be doing parade laps and such....right
p-a-r-a-d-e....what's one of those then Mike? Actually I think I know - it's a magazine we have in the UK from the top shelf where young ladies are photographed in obviously very very hot conditions because they have to take all of their clothes off!
The plan for my CR is to show her once finished and then race of course - that's what bikes are for aren't they!?
I wonder if M3 also used the beefed up tensioner system that was in the CR750 kit? I'm sure Mark tried all sorts of things. The kit tensioner spring was much higher rated than standard but of course like all of the 970 parts, totally impossible to find.
When fitting my tensioner we worked out that preloading the spring in the tensioner socket with three M8 washers stiffened the tensioner blade massively....so that's what I'm running....and of course the oil feed to pressurise the tensioner too.
If anything, this is the frustrating thing for anyone trying to build a CR750 replica - there's tons of knowledge out there, things have been tried over and over, BUT, there's just no repository for all of this information and those that have done the hard work seem very reluctant to share. I thought bikers were a kind of brotherhood until I came across this 'feature' of building a CR....
Don't get me wrong though - Mark is definitely one of the good guys and it's to our collective benefit that there are people like him willing to invest the time in trying things out, breaking stuff, fixing up a better solution and trying all over again.
I might talk to B&C Express in the UK about this chain. If it's european they will know what it is I'm sure....