During the first few miles of my deuce's recovery, the speedometer was working nicely.... Suddenly it whipped around past 60 and spent the rest of the 1200 miles bouncing off of the back side of the zero peg. The odometer continued to work just fine.
I noticed a brown liquid plastic like substance on the inside bottom edge of the dial glass...rust maybe? Hmmm??? I decided to investigate when I got home.
Well, I can't live without a speedometer, so I popped the speedometer out of the dash, and it quickly became apparent that the brown liquid plastic like substance was GL5 transmission oil. My speedometer was partly full of transmission oil! Oh Joy!
If the transmission vent is plugged, and the transmission is full up with oil, the waterproof nature of the deuce's systems can come back to bite you. The pressure that builds when the transmission gets warm has to go somewhere, and in my case, up the waterproof speedometer cable, and into the speedometer was the place to go!
The repair for this problem is to make a little pry bar out of a screwdriver, and carefully pry open the back of the bezel ring that seals the dial glass to the case. Then you have to liberally flush all of the GL5 out of the speedometer mechanism.
I haven't yet decided what to do about lubricating the speedometer bearings. The odometer tap off gear obviously should get a little lubriplate, but I don't know about the fine needle bearings in the eddy brake mechanism. I'll get back to you on that when I figure out the best course of action.
Keep those transmission vents unplugged!
-Chuck
I noticed a brown liquid plastic like substance on the inside bottom edge of the dial glass...rust maybe? Hmmm??? I decided to investigate when I got home.
Well, I can't live without a speedometer, so I popped the speedometer out of the dash, and it quickly became apparent that the brown liquid plastic like substance was GL5 transmission oil. My speedometer was partly full of transmission oil! Oh Joy!
If the transmission vent is plugged, and the transmission is full up with oil, the waterproof nature of the deuce's systems can come back to bite you. The pressure that builds when the transmission gets warm has to go somewhere, and in my case, up the waterproof speedometer cable, and into the speedometer was the place to go!
The repair for this problem is to make a little pry bar out of a screwdriver, and carefully pry open the back of the bezel ring that seals the dial glass to the case. Then you have to liberally flush all of the GL5 out of the speedometer mechanism.
I haven't yet decided what to do about lubricating the speedometer bearings. The odometer tap off gear obviously should get a little lubriplate, but I don't know about the fine needle bearings in the eddy brake mechanism. I'll get back to you on that when I figure out the best course of action.
Keep those transmission vents unplugged!
-Chuck