I asked my machinist to mill 3mm off the hub surface, the surface to be milled is where the sprocket bolts too, and is milled up to, but not including the lip which is needed to centralise the sprocket to the hub’ and therefore must be kept at all cost. The 3mm milling will bring the sprocket closer to the tyre.
I also ask him to improve-on the gap between my new sprocket and hub lip as the new sprocket wasn’t as tight fitting compared to the original sprocket.
When I went to collect the hub he had done a great job on the sprocket to hub fitment’ I couldn’t wish for a tighter fit. Although later at home when I measured to see whether he taking 3mm off I could only account for 2.5 mm and not the 3mm, though I decided to stay with the 2.5mm.
When it came to sizing up what offset I needed for the new front sprocket, I first looked at TJS
http://forums.banditalley.net/index.php?topic=12977.0 photos as a guideline, but otherwise decided to carry out my own measurement. I first started with a straight edge but this soon proved not to be as a easy method as I first thought, so I bought a laser-align tool but still wasn’t getting anywhere so I put the old b4 swingarm back in and took measurement with the chain adjusted and unadjusted, the unadjusted measurement matched the RF swingarm measurement I was getting. So this is where I came up with the dummy sprocket idea.
Whether I used a straight edge or laser-align tool’ which in the end I used both, I found without adjusting the chain up I couldn’t pull the rear wheel inline with the front wheel and therefore in turn the alignment between rear and front sprocket no matter what I tried.
The dummy sprocket I made up, I had to make in two to three bits then glue them together, worked find for adjusting the chain-up but when I tried to rotary chain and sprockets more 60 chain links or so the dummy sprocket would come apart and need reglueing’ so whether they a problem here or just my glueing? We have to see.
After measure, measure and measuring again and now seam to be getting the same resorts each time and the straight edge would slide between the front and rear edge of the tyre and line-up with the back edge of the chain
and the laser was hitting the same spot on the rear of the chain/sprocket as well as the front of the chain/sprocket.... I made the decided its time to bite the bullet and send the sprocket to Scott/sprocket department @ TALON ENGINEERING LTD.
Beforehand’ I sent Scott, a few? More photos of what I had done. Hoping he spots anything I missed! .
I hear you say’ why not do some basic sums...I’m no mathematicians, very basic skills! Maths wasn’t one of my favourites at school, in fact neither was school.