I am referring to the rear of the shift pedal where it pivots on the shaft at the footpeg.
A little slop is to be expected on an old bike, but mine was ridiculously loose.
In a perfect world I would find a worn out bronze bushing that could be replaced.
No such luck.
What I did was wrap the bottom half of the shaft with .004" aluminium shim stock cut with scissors, some grease, and assembled it. A huge improvement.
Note - .004" aluminium shim stock - a.k.a. beer can.
Won't last forever but replacements are cheap and readily available.
wobbly shift pedalR100
Nice fix! I use to make head gaskets out of that stuff for my BSA bantam! Do you know if it the pivot bolt or the pedal that's worn? The bolts come up on eBay. I think I'm going to get quite upset when I put the gearshift back on my 1964 project. I hate sloppy gear shifters so I might be looking into my bronze off cut box..... Or, maybe in homage to Mr Honda's love of rolling element bearings, how about a needle-roller bearing..... :-) 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 I'm putting my Superhawk back together, and I noticed the same thing-the shifter lever was a very sloppy fit on the bolt, allowing the shifter to move so much as to be able to hit my freshly refinished primary cover, which just ain't gonna do. I was thinking I'd slip some thin feeler gage stock in there. A bushing would be a much more satisfactory solution,though.
I have used those in the past. I have a set I call "sacrificial feeler gauges".
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