dissasembly of rear shock covers
Excellent work and thank you for sharing ! Obviously this is equally applicable to other makes also and at the moment I have a 1968 Suzuki Cobra in pieces which I see has a similar rear damper set up with the crimped lip. Like the CL77, the rear damper body on the Suzuki measures 30mm, and the rod is 10mm, but there is very little clearance between the OD of the damper body and the ID of the external spring. I have perhaps 1.8mm to work with, so before going too far I was wondering what the OD of the threaded retainer sleeve you made up was ? Thanks ! Hi
It's all a bit tight but doable... :-) Shock bodies 30mm OD Spring 33.5mm ID Sleeve nut 33mm OD I have checked some early style CL72 shocks and they are the same apart from the 1mm pitch (25.4 tpi) thread compared with my 26tpi. My old lathe is an imperial machine so I couldn't do a metric thread..... Sounds like you have less material to play with but you could try some Girling springs as they are a bit larger diameter. You may also be able to do an internal version a little like the early CB77 ones. I was a bit reluctant to do an internal thread inside the shock body but had to do it inside the sleeve nut anyway in the end. Happy to share a bit more detail on the technique if you send me a pm. Good luck! G '60 C77 '60 C72 '62 C72 Dream '63 CL72
'61 CB72 '64 CB77 '65 CB160 '66 Matchless 350 '67 CL77 '67 S90 '77 CB400F A bit of an update on the rear shock restoration. I was rebuilding some early CL72 dampers and when I got them back together the rebound damping was way to stiff. I could barely pull the rod back out but they pushed in pretty easily.
I used some 15 grade oil and didn't want to go back to thinner oil as it would just be too soft on the bump damping. I experimented a little with the rebound washers which are really spring-loaded one-way valves. With the 15w oil it worked just fine when I reduced them to just one of the thinnest washers on each side. CL77 - Screw Top Complete disassembly.jpg by graham.curtis, on Flickr The washers are on the left side of the picture. G '60 C77 '60 C72 '62 C72 Dream '63 CL72
'61 CB72 '64 CB77 '65 CB160 '66 Matchless 350 '67 CL77 '67 S90 '77 CB400F
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