conkerman wrote:I was told long ago that EP (Hypoid) oil is needed to cope with the sliding load on spiral cut gears.
What you propose could certainly be a contributing factor.
Horrible stinky stuff that it is.
I recall years ago several people trying to get me to "get rid of that dirty motorbike" (my beloved RD400) .....
I got a winter car, a Toyota Celica 1600ST, cheap because it needed a clutch fitting (little old lady had spent her time slipping the clutch every where).
Laying on my back with the car on ramps with cow crap and other detritus falling into my hair while changing the clutch and the gearbox oil while I was under there and having EP90 drizzled onto my face ... made changing the clutch on the RD400 a dream job, hell I even taught my then girlfriend how to do that job
.... the RD was dyno'd at Dugdales to 64hp at the rear wheel
The porting was very excessive, it ate pistons and rings every month, but went like hot snot. Clutch plates usually lasted 3 months before giving up the ghost. High quality ones would last 4 months but were twice the price so the cheap ones where better value. Springs where usually changed at the same time and always packed with shims to apply more pressure. It also seemed to have an appetite for rear wheel and swing arm bearings every 6 months or so.
Add in the DG radial heads, Race Ace expansion chambers ... some different carbs (gone blank on what they where) .. Boyson reeds with wildly flowed cages etc etc.
After such a deep maintenance schedule with the RD owning my first 4T four, a Z650B1, was a revelation! Only ever seemed to need the occasional chain adjustment.