Actually, dry clutches are far superior to wet clutches. The ONLY adverse issue with the ones for H1R and H2R, are the metal friction plates. If you hold one of our dry clutches out at a long traffic light, you will over heat the friction and steel plates, and warp them. If you have the parts for a dry clutch, and build one for the street, DON'T hold the clutch released for long periods of time.
Now, realize that Jawa, Bridgestone, a lot of European bikes, and even one series of the Suzuki Limited Production 1100 bikes all had dry clutches, with composite fiber plates, and they work just dandy. Kevin Cameron and myself have both built dry clutch setups using the stock street bike clutch covers, modified, stock later model inner clutch hub, end plate, springs, plates and modifying the outer clutch hub with a spacer to clear the seal ihn the clutch cover. LOTSA WORK, but, superior clutch.
The input shaft for the H racer dry clutches is 10.00mm (.394 inch, just at 4/10ths of an inch) longer than the street bike stuff, and if you are a good machinist, and can figure stuff out, doing this isn't a real problem. I am doing one on my decades long liquid cooled H2-(R) street bike engine, using an early distributor drive H1 street bike cover. Most of the stock street bike input shafts have a recess on their hub ends, and most people don't realize it is for a seal, for the push rod, to take the same seal that is in an H1R/H2R input shaft. My objective is to use the kick starter, stock oil pump, tach, and distributor drive to drive a Yamaha TZ250/350 early water pump.
In the outer hub, the gear was separated from the hub, a spacer was made to space the hub outward, bolted back together, and the spacer was also the outer seal race. To make up for the increased thickness of the outer hub, the inner hub flange back face of the shaft area was cut down 6.00mm (.240 inch). It is a juggling act, but, works if you do it right. To get the nut to sit in roughly the same place on the input shaft, the inner face of the nut boss on the inner hub was cut 2.50mm's, (.100 inch). An extra push rod ball was inserted to lengthen the push rod.
The only other mod of the stock wet clutch parts we did was to make a full width outer ring, for the outer hub, closed off the hub fingers so they wouldn't crack and break off from no support. Look at a factory dry clutch outer hub bell, and you will see what Kevin and I built, and added to the hub, the cover with the holes in it that spins with the clutch. This part is a special part on the H racers, is the outer hub that bolts onto the gear.
Some years ago, I did the same to an S series clutch, for a race project for a guy in Oregon, never did hear if he ever got it, nor the whole bike done, or raced it.
This is an involved project, and if you have the time, machinery, can weld both aluminum and steels, and patience, would make for a great time waster if you get bored with things in general. The icing to the cake would be a 6 speed as well. I haven't found an existing street bike trans that will interchange easily...yet, but, I'm always on the lookout for one.
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