I went through my stock of sprockets, rotors/parts, and found two that were within specs/good shape to re-bush with hard bronze. One was from the Dream parts engine [s/n 10098xx], the other a SuperHawk [104xxxx]. It appears Honda made a thickness change, as the Dream sprocket does not have a step. The inside face of the rotor ass'y is .565" to the bottom; the stepped sprocket is .545" from the nose of the sprocket to the stepped face, which means the sprocket face will contact the rotor face, with .020" to spare. The Dream sprocket is .575" from nose to face, i.e., the nose of the sprocket will bottom out in the rotor before the two faces contact, with .010" to spare. See the photos.
My Q is: Does any part of the sprocket [face or nose] make contact with the rotor, besides the rollers? I realize the sprocket "floats" on the crankshaft to center itself with the starter motor sprocket via the chain.
The last pic shows the step [rt sprocket], and on the crank in third pic; the second pic is the Dream sprocket on the crank, showing space [.010"] between two faces.
crank-mounted starter sprocket
crank-mounted starter sprocket
Re: crank-mounted starter sprocket<<<I realize the sprocket "floats" on the crankshaft to center itself with the starter motor sprocket via the chain. >>>
There is a part "starting sprocket stopper" which won't allow the sprocket to move away from the engine toward the "starting clutch outer" and if you install the sprocket without taping the center into the crank seal that "stopper" may seize the sprocket and not allow you to turn it by hand. .................lm
Re: crank-mounted starter sprocket
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