Rechecked the lateral movement, its pinned in tight. At least I can't detect any movement there. The seal with the retainer ring is there and working along with the bearing pins. What's the right way to check for crank movement? It seems like there would be a possibility for movement since there's probably some play in the bearings? Or are the bearing pretty tight? Anyway I couldn't detect any movement by just grabbing the ends and trying to push and pull. I did notice a vibration at higher RPM's a few hundred miles before the failure. It would vibrate on the highway bars noticeably. It wasn't there before. That may be a clue that something was going on. Could that be caused by the seal starting to hit the journal, or something else?
I wasn't even aware of the chisel marks to denote the matched halves. Yep, I put the halves together and there are two chisel marks near the primary gear and they do line up perfectly.
Interesting concept of the oil pushing the seal out. It's difficult to tell how freely the oil can move through the bearing when its assembled into the crank. That would have to be checked, like you say, when the crank is rebuilt. How much pressure do you think the oil pump can produce? Is it enough to move a seal?
This is great input. I appreciate your help. I'm learning more about cranks, seals, oil flow and bearings, probably more that I ever wanted to.
Bill Bune requested that I send the crank and the casings for him to make an assessment. What's the cost to ship those parts around? Would it be easier to ship in pieces?
Based on what I've seen so far I don't think we can definitely say what's causing the problem. The areas that need to be looked at are the oil flow through that bearing and possibly pinning in the seal better with multiple punch marks, maybe the crank has some lateral movement, but I'm not pushing it hard enough.
Anything other areas we can assess?
Thanks for all the great input,
Ron
Official NRRC member.