Post
by PeterCrespin » Mon Dec 29, 2014 10:42 am
A surface grinder gives a finer anf flatter 'cross-hatched' (ish) finish. I turned a Jag flywheel down in my old 12" gap bed lathe easily enough but had it balanced subsequently. It's tough steel but cut perfectly well with a carbide tool.
The minor problem I had was the huge swarf which came of as a hot continuous sharp and tough ribbon because the steel was quite ductile. I'm not sure any kind of tip profile change would have broken it into chips it was such tough metal. Because of the large diameter there is a high tool speed at normal revs so I had to run the lather quite slowly.
The pressure plate is not worth rescuing, partly because it will probably cost nearly as much to mount and machine as replace, but also because I think the geometry of a diaphragm plate means a minor change in position as caused by a worn friction plate or machined pressure plate causes more of a clamping load reduction than the same dimensional change would on a 3.8 coil spring type clutch. I would assume the entire clutch is scrap and start with a new kit on a freshly-surfaced flywheel.
1E75339 UberLynx D-Type; 1R27190 70 FHC; 1E78478; 2001 Vanden Plas