i've been experiencing frustration in regards to potential low oil pressure problems with my '71 BSA thunderbolt. the A65 engine is infamous for its timing-side crank bushing, through which the entire bottom end is fed its oil. i frequent a BSA forum at britbike.com, where this topic has been discussed. however, i'm unsatisfied with a few questions, and i've found a few people on this forum to be a little better in the critical thinking dept.
the oil system works as such: there is an oil tank, which supplies oil to the oil pump, which sends to a main oil gallery. in this oil gallery is the oil pressure relief valve, which open at 50 PSI, returning oil to the tank to relieve pressure. also in this first gallery (on later models) is a port for a pressure switch, which switches a warning light at 5 PSI. beyond this is the crank main bush, then the rod big ends, then small holes which spray the cylinder walls. the other end of the crank is supported by a roller bearing.
so my questions is this: if a gauge is installed in the pressure switch port (between the pump and the first exit or pressure drop), how accurate will it be, and does the orifice size at which it reads matter? it is technically a dynamic system, so i don't know if the orifice size within this gallery will impact the reading.
this problem i 'm having is this: when cold, the gauge reads 50 PSI, and the light goes off. when it gets nice and hot, the light comes on well above idle, and it doesn't read above 10 PSI on matter how high i rev. the BSA guys say to unplug the light and forget about it, but i can't help but be worried. i got this bike with a blown engine, obviously due to poor oiling. i don't want to see it happen again.
engineer guys??