Stuff like this is why I’m still glad I picked up another sportster. I know my bike has limitations in two up comfort, etc. At least I have no worries that the bottom end of my iron 1200 will ever have excessive runout. With that being said, I would still buy a bike with a M8 as I don’t abuse my bikes by doing clutch dumps, burnouts, hard down shifts, etc. Great video!
As a guy who went from an EVO Sportster to a twin cam 88 I agree with everything you said. If I had known everything that I know now I would have gotten another Sportster.
Great information on the flywheel assembly. But now I know why I have this new vibration going on. I down shift a lot so that's probably how it started. Thanks for the awesome insight ✌🏻👍🏻👍🏻
Its said by somone else before, the best vid , now I understand what could be the cause of crank runout. I also I understand that downshifting agressivly is not good. And its not ( always) bad Luck when a runout occure. It has a cause and can be avoid. Maybe some guys who have compensator issues AND have a cranckrunout understand that the reason iis ridinstyle. Thanks agai mate.
On my third Harley since 1988 with an fj1200 between the first 2. I have a '99 TC88 FXDL now that I still think of as new, '95 evo FXDL before this one. Got a factory workshop manual and invested in the tools, mostly I go with the manual but the torque sequence spec for exhaust flange bolts is wrong so I don't assume. Cross reference the metric spec and double check the first check. Everyone is capable of making a mistake, it's just the way things are. Thanks for putting up relevant interesting content.
Excellent information! We have all learned a lot here. One question: Why not make a pin with a key on one side, like the pin on Evolution crankshafts? (if it has that key, the pin will not turn) Maybe it can't be done on a cylindrical pin? Thanks for your channel!!!
Great video and thanks for posting! HD focuses on sound, cosmetics and styling. They even use their stock run of the mill engines on their most expensive $50000 CVO's. The M8 is a wonderful platform to build upon with aftermarket parts from Dark Horse , S&S and other top aftermarket companies. Good luck getting 100000 reliable miles on a stock motor, even if its bone stock.
I just ran across your video and I must say that I am impressed. I have been trying to make a decision between the DR, and the KLR since they are both about the same budget I want to stick to. I like the value and reliability factor they both bring. I am aiming to buy one this winter from my local dealer. For under $8500 out the door (Canadian) and I can be in the Rocky Mountains in less than 2 hours in the heart of Kakwa Provincial park in British Columbia, Canada. Fly fishing for Arctic Grayling and bullhead trout. Your video helped me solidify my choice and although I’m going to try the KLR (simply because I have a trade deal for a mountain sled brewing) but regardless of that I’m going to buy a DR and modify it to my liking so I can get as far away from civilization as my skill sets will allow me. Great video sir. From Grande Prairie, Alberta Canada.
@@MasterTechMiller Hey pal, sorry for delay...yea not a prpblem, you have thourough material, that is extremely impotant and very intersting, and well explained! i have a 2005 15th anniv fatboy, silver. my indy, put a new S&S crank, fueling cam plate,lifters,a hf oil pump and new piston rings. No head work, i do have a TWIN CAM 95" cu motor, so the power was there from factory.I also had (from another tech) G Andrews 37 cams. ( more for mid/top end) due to this, my low speed, is a bitch. so im bounhcing the clutch alot, esp in (Maroon people )traffic. you got me thinking, with your awesome vid, maybe i put a little damange to the crank? I do hear a lot of banging when hot. sounds like an old 350 chevy though , its constant...so i think im ok. the gear drive, sure pronounced the sha-sha-sha sound. ooh well, now i just beat on it ...MODERATLY!! sorry for the length, but im on furlough..lol ps..my last run out was .005. close as sh...t! eh , yes I DO HAVE gear drive.
Great info! I’ve been researching this for my 07 rkc that I’ve put 100k since new. I don’t ride it rough so when I rebuilt to a 107 at about 70k the runout was minimal. I’ve been debating the dark horse etc but now am thinking just weld it when it comes out if it’s still looking good. I was going to tear it apart this winter but may wait longer since I know the bike has never been abused. TY.
Anything above 6-7 thou runout at the crank on the cam side and your already damaging your oil pump,this started after 2003 when Harley stopped using the timken bearings in the crank setup (Cheaper), get it trued, install over size solid cank pin and timken bearing, then your good to light it up, of course then you need to ugrade the primary/Trans ditch the drive belt and go to chain, wow, lot of money!
A1 cycles does amazing cranks 0.0005 runout H beam rods They keep em on the shelf .. $1400 USD I think Gonna be doing bottom end on mine soon. Started getting some lifter ticking .. when riding next to a brother on way to Sturgis was hearing what sounded like a swooshing metal sound from my cam side. So I’m sure a lifter is dying and prob that little cam chain not spinning around good and true. Thank God the bike survived the 3k miles we did in 4 days .. 100* heat (thank u Ultracool 🙏 🤲). Once my old Road King back from the shop gonna spend the money and bullet proof my road glide 2023 FLTRX 26k miles 1700 did the SE stage 2 15k did SS 124 with 482 cam I don’t BEAT in it but I’m not easy on it. That 482 cam gotta run it higher rpms. I love my highway pulls and I’ll admit I do some engine braking I ride in an MC. Ride ~25k a year. Need that motor that will live 75-100k. I don’t need 150hp. That 140/140 area is where it’s at now and I’m more than fine with that power level .. def gonna go for a mid cam bc I don’t like having to light it up at 3700. But I def don’t want a cam that gonna bring tons of tq at 1800 bc I ride in rain cold .. year around in Chicago Much love from the states
this design is fine STOCK and will not twist under stock horsepower, The issue with runout comes when people modify their bikes to put BIG horsepower through it which will naturally cause problems to other stock components if not strengthened accordingly. This applies to almost every engine in existence.
@@Mike-jv8bv Then why did Harley have to loosen the allowable tolerance to avoid warranty claims? These cranks were built with subpar build quality which was aggravated by the penny-pinching elimination of the left side Timken bearing. Harley KNEW about this and ACTIVELY took measures to avoid responsibility.
I agree, rydingstyle is important people who want a lot more horsepower do that with a reason . If you will , everything kan be broken if you wish . Its like using steroids you get a lot more power but you can tear off a musckle / tendon becouse it cant handle the strenght@@Mike-jv8bv
@@Mike-jv8bv if you ride it like an old woman and never rev it or lug it ,yes the cranks wont twist or suffer from excessive run out, then make a post '' Ive done 80k on my Tin Can with zero problems'' ,I know a fellow with a stock Night Train he bought brand new ,lucky if its done 35 K has excessive runout already
@@jamessouthworth1699 ON the twin cams no doubt. The M8 corrected most of these issues now. Harley won't admit it but they hired the germans to engineer the milwaukee 8, that's why it's smooth.
An edge drilled set plug drilled and tapped half of its circumference into the pin and half into the flywheel but not more than 1/4-1/3 of the thickness of the flywheel (depending upon plug diameter) peening the metal of the pin and flywheel with a punch or small chisel to keep the set screw from backing out will prevent twist to a certain degree of abuse. However, in a contest between Bullet Proof Mechanical Assembly and User Abuse, User Abuse always wins.
Hey @@MasterTechMiller What symptoms are experienced if the crank does twist? Besides the runout being out of spec, of course. I ask because I have a wild vibration going through my bike atm, almost rendering it unridable. It happened when I screamed out of a corner and found false neutral. This made the engine rev high (didn’t hit the rev limit though) and an immediate vibration began. I thought it strange, so in order to dismiss the trany as the issue, I pulled in the clutch a gave it a big rev which increased the vibration! Yes I do burnouts… occasionally, but not from a standing start. Engine was built by Mark Hood Engineering - it’s hard to resist burnouts 😬 I don’t expect a diagnosis from you, just outline some effects a twisted crank has, please?
@dapezent I'm not sure a twisted crank would cause severe vibrations like you are describing as my mates bike had 42 thou of run out. He was rising the bike around & never experienced any noticeable vibrations out of the ordinary. In saying that though, I guess it is possible if the crank is extremely twisted, but keep in mind, 42thou is huge amount & we could actually watch the crank wobble when rotated. The balancer gear may have shifted slightly on you. There is a pressed on gear that drives the balancer ahaft. There is a pin on the crank that limits rotating but maybe it's fully shifted and causing the vibration? I've never seen this happen, and Harley claim that if it does happen there rider would not even know. It's more of safety feature to ensure the balance gear does not shift so far that it collides with the main journal. Having never experienced a shifted gear I can't give an accurate opinion on what it may feel like. I would also like the mention that crank cases & main bearings would more that likely be damaged severely if the crank shifted or twisted enough to cause such a violent vibration as you're describing.
Speaking of the compensator, have you had many issues with the stock comp ramp? Would you recommend upgrading to a darkhorse or star billet? Thanks for the info Tommy 🤙🏽
The stock compensator ramp is rubbish! I highly recommend the billet steel upgraded one from Cycle-Rama. The only time I suggest a dark horse man-o-war ramp is when a welded Flywheel & heavy duty aftermarket transmission is used.
Wow, something "stock" is rubbish? Say that isn't so? So....As a "Master" are you going to send your recommended "fix" or "redesign" to Harley-Davidson? Also, I what do you do when you notice + .010" runout on a customer's flywheel assembly? Grab another one or do you attempt to fix it yourself? (Can't wait to hear THIS response)
@kennethwise7108 I'm not the one who is big noting about having a far superior design that waiting on a patent that is much better than the Harley engineering team. You are what we call here in Australia a F#$k Witt. The video outlines what options there are.
If you’re runout is in spec, allowing you to switch to a gear drive cam chest, is it not going to eventually go over the amount of runout for the gear drive? Or does the gear drive prevent it? Love the channel. Always great content.
Yes the run out can change at any time no matter if it's a gear drive or chain drive. The recommended run out on gear drive cams is lower as the teeth have to mesh properly. If you happen to twist your crank (too much runout) then you may run into trouble with the teeth not meshing
Any runout north of .001" will shorten the lifespan of your lower end DRASTICALLY regardless of what "spec" or "acceptable tolerance" is in their garbage "book".
I still can’t believe they can’t plug that shit from the factory… I mean come on.. how much would it cost per unit to give us a decent (not darkhorse quality of course but maybe SS crank quality) crank ?
What’s up man! Thanks for the video. I bought a dark horse crank, including screamin eagle lefty bearings on my 05 Dyna. Converting it to 100ci. Will my runout be an issue even though I have the “bulletproof” dark horse crank? Or is there still possibilities to have issues even though I don’t have the Timken bottom end conversion? Thank you.
I have a Lowrider st 2023 with a S&S 475 cam , 55 mm throttle body , 55 injectors , two into 1 Trash in pipe . About 139 torque and 118 hp. It seams fast now , what do you think about going to the 132 S&S . I’m not racing it but like the fun factor . Also have a 128 2020 Road glide special , 55 throttle body , 55 injectors Krome works two into one 475 cam . Is it worth going up to the 132 , and does it get a little hard to handle . FYI use to be HD dealer and build a lot of motors .
What flywheel do they use in the 135 . Your videos are very good I’m sure it gets a little involved for some . I use to race flat bottom boats and built a lot of engines . Very good info .
@@MasterTechMillerI have a 2019 sg with the 107 but I’m going to upgrade to a 129” big bore kit with 550 gear cam. What flywheel do you recommend or will be better to get the stock flywheel welded?
Question: In this video, i see that it looks like the sprocket shaft side is barely on the bearings of the stand? I've never seen a stand like this. Is it just for checking true? Most stands here that I've seen or used are much lower and beefy.
I’m getting a subtle but noticeable vibration on my M8 114. It feels like drive train….. like where the cruise control is set and the torque against the rear wheel is -0+. Down shifting or accelerating you don’t notice it but under a zero load I feel a rumbling vibration…. Very soft but it’s noticeable. Almost feel like I need to check my runout left and right to see if I’m having an issue…… I’m a throttle idiot😂
Hi Tommy Which flywheel for a 131 do you recommend and what stroke I’m doing the 131 with the CR512 darkhorse manowar, evolution complete clutch I don’t do wheelies or stunts. I am known for doing hard down shift at time but not always
you mentioned downshifting, so does rev matching while down shifting further damage this part? I almost always use engine breaking first to slow down. could you elaborate
Rev matching while down shifting is fine. Doing that greatly reduces stresses on the driveline. If you downshift slowly & end up coasting along with the clutch pulled in & and the engine falling to idle speed & then downshift, letting the clutch out, resulting in a high amount of negative stress applied to the driveline, this will increase the risk of crankshaft runout
What is a big downshift for you? Because while I am cruising at 3rpm sometimes I downshift to engine break at the corners… btw I always try to rev match
I would consider a big downshift to be any RPM above 3000rpm without rev matching. Coasting with the clutch pulled in & the engine at idle, then releasing the clutch without rev matching is also a bad idea
yes v V rod! you wont have that problem. at a stop you can rev v rod to above the red line of air cooled HD tractor engines then hold on and dump the clutch!!! im non biased i still have a shovelhead , if you want durable performance vrsc
approx. 2 yrs ago, I had a flywheel replaced with a "bullet proof" OEM Flywheel or my '15 HD limited. I have the original flywheel. How can I tell if that flywheel is not 100%? I was told one of the arms wasn't falling freely, but I cant seem to figure that out. It seems like it is falling freely. thanks..
@@MasterTechMillerI didn’t. The local shop tested it. I have the OEM flywheel in my garage. Is there a simple test I can do? I set the arms upward and one doesn’t fall down immediately, but if I were to slightly tap it, it does fall down.
My question is, if you are doing performance upgrades, cams, tunes and so on, why aren't welded flywheels recommend to all those clients, I know a few blokes that have had massive engine failure due to this and to say the bikes are only fit for a purpose is a complete cop out! I hope Harley or the Toowoomba dealership honor's the repairs required to get said bikes back in a1 condition! No young fella buying a breakout is just going to go touring on it are they?? Riding it hard or not, a 35k+ bike shouldn't just fail from a down shift or a burnout! I think Harley Davidson has a lot to answer for on this one... even Indian do it better with forged 1 pce crank!
Budget. Not everyone can afford a welded crank. What normally happens is the customer wants to do a stage 2 cam kit to get a better sound & a bit power from their bike. When they discover just how much it improves the bike they then begin to start having fun with it, either by doing a few test n tune days at the strip or by doing skids. It's a progression for most of them. I always recommend welded cranks to guys to who tell me they are wanting to give it a hard time. If you wanna play, you have to pay. It's simple. Those who tell me they just want to wake it up a bit with a stage 2 cam kit & don't want to spend the extra money on a welded crank then start mucking around racing etc will almost always run into trouble. No 'cop outs here'. It's just like those 79 series Ute's. They go and buy a highly priced underpowered old tank and the moment you want to tow anything more than a loaded 6x4 box trailer you need to put a heavy duty clutch in it, exhaust, tune & snorkel just to get it to perform as it should by standards. Harley have an outstanding warranty unmatched by any other manufacturer I know. No one is stopping anyone from buying an Indian or going down that road with other manufacturers. People just want Harley's over other brands when it comes to big bore V Twin bikes. Harley offer an unmatched warranty when it comes to performance & backing the products. 2 years, unlimited kilometres & almost everything is covered when it comes to performance upgrades. If people are out of the warranty period & depending on the circumstances Harley offer a good will warranty process available to them if they qualify.
There was a good post /article by a fellow James Russell I think his name is, ''Before you buy a Harley Davidson Motorcycle'' ,if you can find it on net ,about all the issues with the Twin cams etc and in his opinion only the Sportsters [certain years were any good ] fit for purpose by HD standards might be, ''only ridden on weekends and not flogged'' ,judging from the bad engineering /cheap short cuts to save time and money ,its just mind boggling the bad engineering and crank issues etc in this day and age ,realistically, if want a bike to ride hard ,flog ,buy a jap bike ,the only HD I will own, is a late model EVO after you learn their inherent problems and solve them [no big deal really ] with them ,you cant look at a HD and think its like a Jap bike.
When I did my stage 2 on my low rider 2023 with s&s 475 with gear drive, my crank run out was 0,0039. Hope that stays in that value… I don’t do any wheelies and burnouts, just cruising and sometimes I like to pull hard on my throttle 🙏
Hi Tommy, great video!! I always learn a lot from your explanations!! Thanks. I had a question!? When you replace the pin with a solid steel one, wouldn't there be a problem with unbalancing the weight of the crankshaft? Or does it not affect the balance?
It’s just unacceptable that Harley doesn’t deliver it already welded cuz’ it’s not that hard to do it before assembling. For us as consumers, to get it welded we have to disassemble the entire engine, what costs a lot of money, to have a 20 dollar weld. It’s not about saving money at the assembly line cuz nobody would complain about paying 100 dollars more for a bike that comes with a welded and really reliable crank from the factory.
So for those of us that do rev matched downshifts .. we are jacking up our cranks each time ? How are we supposed to slow down? Just let off and pull in the clutch at 2k and coast ? ?
I'm not sure how you came to that conclusion. Rev matching down shifts are absolutely fine. That's the best way to do it. Not rev matching down shifts is what causes it
I don’t understand why wouldn’t S&Ss crank be welded? That makes no sense to me! If they are selling a better crank and rods why wouldn’t it be welded as well since that is the best way to go and they know that, how much more could it possible cost as a specific production part. Makes zero sense to me.
The simple answer is, don't abuse your motor. Yeah, sure you can strengthen your crankshaft, but all that will do, if you abuse your motor, is wreck your primary or gearbox or both. You cant have it always.
The key reason for NOT using a solid crankshaft is they cannot be overhauled to zero time without an advanced machine shop capable of grinding crank journals properly. That has immensely benefited owners since the tapered crankpin era. The proper term for the "plug" is "crank pin".
Cost cutting is the reason for weak crankshafts.... quality suffers...what a load of B.S. selling my twincam 103 and getting something with decent quality
It's because Harley is lazy. Look at an Indian Thunderstroke crank. It is still a single pin, but it's 5x stronger. The one and only reason Harley and Indian use single pin cranks, is for sound. Simple as that. Indian understood that the ancient "knife and fork" style single pin is incredibly weak, and it absolutely is, so Indian uses a crank pin that is like double the size of Harleys crank pin, and they offset the rods, but only just. Not offset like typical V configured automotive engines, where there's a significant gap between the rods and a balancer between them, but instead the rods sit right next to eachother and in fact, the rods ends ride against eachother as bearing surfaces. It maintains simplicity. It maintains sound. But it increases strength by an astronomical amount.
Help please ….. I have taken all of your awesome advice…. So need help again……my run out on a brand new bike.Has only 3 miles on it if that…. It has a 5thousand run out already. They just started putting on a 131 kit for me And now I’m thinking they need to fix the bottom end first. I’ve made them stop ✋🏻….. I trust your expertise!! What should I do? Fix it now ??? Or go with it putting in a 131 with CR 512 … romp will be changed and using the fueling oem cam plate like you do in your builds
Why is 5 thou "fine"? You can't use gear drive with that much runout. It can't be good for anything, especially BRAND NEW. I'd tell the dealer to take it back
Thank you!! So much great knowledge in a 10 minute video appreciate your wisdom 🙏
Thanks for watching! I'm glad you enjoyed it.
That was one of the best informative video on runout I have seen
Thanks for watching. Glad you enjoyed it
When I downshift I always rev match which I think reduces the stress on the crank and flywheels
Absolutely
Stuff like this is why I’m still glad I picked up another sportster. I know my bike has limitations in two up comfort, etc. At least I have no worries that the bottom end of my iron 1200 will ever have excessive runout.
With that being said, I would still buy a bike with a M8 as I don’t abuse my bikes by doing clutch dumps, burnouts, hard down shifts, etc.
Great video!
As a guy who went from an EVO Sportster to a twin cam 88 I agree with everything you said. If I had known everything that I know now I would have gotten another Sportster.
Why so? The Iron 1200's are also press fit cranks, NOT bolted like the much older Sportsters.
Always great info Tommy, fact based! Thanks for always giving us the proper info on upgrading parts. Good, better, best.
Thanks for watching!
Great information on the flywheel assembly. But now I know why I have this new vibration going on. I down shift a lot so that's probably how it started. Thanks for the awesome insight ✌🏻👍🏻👍🏻
I love your channel! You teach how to save money by telling us what parts are needed and what Harley parts are good or how strengthen them!
Thanks for watching! Glad you like the channel 😀
Tommy you have answered alot of my questions with this video. Now I know. Thank you for sharing your knowledge. Peace ✌
Its said by somone else before, the best vid , now I understand what could be the cause of crank runout. I also I understand that downshifting agressivly is not good. And its not ( always) bad Luck when a runout occure. It has a cause and can be avoid. Maybe some guys who have compensator issues AND have a cranckrunout understand that the reason iis ridinstyle.
Thanks agai mate.
On my third Harley since 1988 with an fj1200 between the first 2.
I have a '99 TC88 FXDL now that I still think of as new, '95 evo FXDL before this one.
Got a factory workshop manual and invested in the tools, mostly I go with the manual but the torque sequence spec for exhaust flange bolts is wrong so I don't assume.
Cross reference the metric spec and double check the first check.
Everyone is capable of making a mistake, it's just the way things are.
Thanks for putting up relevant interesting content.
Thanks for watching!! Glad your able to hey there & give it a go!
Excellent information! We have all learned a lot here. One question: Why not make a pin with a key on one side, like the pin on Evolution crankshafts? (if it has that key, the pin will not turn) Maybe it can't be done on a cylindrical pin? Thanks for your channel!!!
Love your work. Thanks for the informative video. Keep them coming. 👌👏👏
Great video and thanks for posting! HD focuses on sound, cosmetics and styling. They even use their stock run of the mill engines on their most expensive $50000 CVO's. The M8 is a wonderful platform to build upon with aftermarket parts from Dark Horse , S&S and other top aftermarket companies. Good luck getting 100000 reliable miles on a stock motor, even if its bone stock.
2 guys in my club hit 60K on their 2022 M8 already. Bone stock.
I just ran across your video and I must say that I am impressed. I have been trying to make a decision between the DR, and the KLR since they are both about the same budget I want to stick to. I like the value and reliability factor they both bring. I am aiming to buy one this winter from my local dealer. For under $8500 out the door (Canadian) and I can be in the Rocky Mountains in less than 2 hours in the heart of Kakwa Provincial park in British Columbia, Canada. Fly fishing for Arctic Grayling and bullhead trout. Your video helped me solidify my choice and although I’m going to try the KLR (simply because I have a trade deal for a mountain sled brewing) but regardless of that I’m going to buy a DR and modify it to my liking so I can get as far away from civilization as my skill sets will allow me.
Great video sir.
From Grande Prairie, Alberta Canada.
@1977jhall Thanks for watching! I appreciate the feedback & support.
Good luck with you ventures
Excellent presentation. I feel like I've been inside my crankcase.
Thanks for watching 👍
the best video, I've ever seen about flywheels
Thanks for watching! Glad you liked it
@@MasterTechMiller Hey pal, sorry for delay...yea not a prpblem, you have thourough material, that is extremely impotant and very intersting, and well explained!
i have a 2005 15th anniv fatboy, silver. my indy, put a new S&S crank, fueling cam plate,lifters,a hf oil pump and new piston rings. No head work, i do have a TWIN CAM 95" cu motor, so the power was there from factory.I also had (from another tech) G Andrews 37 cams. ( more for mid/top end) due to this, my low speed, is a bitch. so im bounhcing the clutch alot, esp in (Maroon people )traffic. you got me thinking, with your awesome vid, maybe i put a little damange to the crank?
I do hear a lot of banging when hot. sounds like an old 350 chevy though , its constant...so i think im ok. the gear drive, sure pronounced the sha-sha-sha sound. ooh well, now i just beat on it ...MODERATLY!! sorry for the length, but im on furlough..lol
ps..my last run out was .005. close as sh...t! eh , yes I DO HAVE gear drive.
Great info! I’ve been researching this for my 07 rkc that I’ve put 100k since new. I don’t ride it rough so when I rebuilt to a 107 at about 70k the runout was minimal. I’ve been debating the dark horse etc but now am thinking just weld it when it comes out if it’s still looking good. I was going to tear it apart this winter but may wait longer since I know the bike has never been abused. TY.
Anything above 6-7 thou runout at the crank on the cam side and your already damaging your oil pump,this started after 2003 when Harley stopped using the timken bearings in the crank setup (Cheaper), get it trued, install over size solid cank pin and timken bearing, then your good to light it up, of course then you need to ugrade the primary/Trans ditch the drive belt and go to chain, wow, lot of money!
Excellent video Tommy, great info. Thanks for sharing, Cheers.
Glad you enjoyed it
A1 cycles does amazing cranks
0.0005 runout
H beam rods
They keep em on the shelf .. $1400 USD I think
Gonna be doing bottom end on mine soon. Started getting some lifter ticking .. when riding next to a brother on way to Sturgis was hearing what sounded like a swooshing metal sound from my cam side. So I’m sure a lifter is dying and prob that little cam chain not spinning around good and true. Thank God the bike survived the 3k miles we did in 4 days .. 100* heat (thank u Ultracool 🙏 🤲). Once my old Road King back from the shop gonna spend the money and bullet proof my road glide
2023 FLTRX
26k miles
1700 did the SE stage 2
15k did SS 124 with 482 cam
I don’t BEAT in it but I’m not easy on it. That 482 cam gotta run it higher rpms. I love my highway pulls and I’ll admit I do some engine braking
I ride in an MC. Ride ~25k a year. Need that motor that will live 75-100k. I don’t need 150hp. That 140/140 area is where it’s at now and I’m more than fine with that power level .. def gonna go for a mid cam bc I don’t like having to light it up at 3700. But I def don’t want a cam that gonna bring tons of tq at 1800 bc I ride in rain cold .. year around in Chicago
Much love from the states
It's ridiculous that a company that calls themselves "premium" would send cranks like this out the door and eliminate the left side Timken bearing.
this design is fine STOCK and will not twist under stock horsepower, The issue with runout comes when people modify their bikes to put BIG horsepower through it which will naturally cause problems to other stock components if not strengthened accordingly. This applies to almost every engine in existence.
@@Mike-jv8bv Then why did Harley have to loosen the allowable tolerance to avoid warranty claims? These cranks were built with subpar build quality which was aggravated by the penny-pinching elimination of the left side Timken bearing. Harley KNEW about this and ACTIVELY took measures to avoid responsibility.
I agree, rydingstyle is important people who want a lot more horsepower do that with a reason . If you will , everything kan be broken if you wish . Its like using steroids you get a lot more power but you can tear off a musckle / tendon becouse it cant handle the strenght@@Mike-jv8bv
@@Mike-jv8bv if you ride it like an old woman and never rev it or lug it ,yes the cranks wont twist or suffer from excessive run out, then make a post '' Ive done 80k on my Tin Can with zero problems'' ,I know a fellow with a stock Night Train he bought brand new ,lucky if its done 35 K has excessive runout already
@@jamessouthworth1699 ON the twin cams no doubt. The M8 corrected most of these issues now. Harley won't admit it but they hired the germans to engineer the milwaukee 8, that's why it's smooth.
Thank you. Very informative
HD'S 12thou is scary
Yes, 12thou is a lot however, with the OEM Cam plate & oil pump it does get by. No way would I put one back together with 10thou though.
So glad my 01 FXDX comes with Timkin bearing
An edge drilled set plug drilled and tapped half of its circumference into the pin and half into the flywheel but not more than 1/4-1/3 of the thickness of the flywheel (depending upon plug diameter) peening the metal of the pin and flywheel with a punch or small chisel to keep the set screw from backing out will prevent twist to a certain degree of abuse. However, in a contest between Bullet Proof Mechanical Assembly and User Abuse, User Abuse always wins.
Back in the 60's It was made in 5 pieces I was amazed when rebuilding I'm 75.
Why can’t you just stitch weld oem crank pin? Why do you need solid slug?? Is that a must or can I have shop stitch my oem crank pin??
I don't see why you can't
Excellent description. Thanks for the informative vid.
Thanks for watching
Hey @@MasterTechMiller
What symptoms are experienced if the crank does twist? Besides the runout being out of spec, of course.
I ask because I have a wild vibration going through my bike atm, almost rendering it unridable. It happened when I screamed out of a corner and found false neutral. This made the engine rev high (didn’t hit the rev limit though) and an immediate vibration began. I thought it strange, so in order to dismiss the trany as the issue, I pulled in the clutch a gave it a big rev which increased the vibration!
Yes I do burnouts… occasionally, but not from a standing start. Engine was built by Mark Hood Engineering - it’s hard to resist burnouts 😬
I don’t expect a diagnosis from you, just outline some effects a twisted crank has, please?
@dapezent I'm not sure a twisted crank would cause severe vibrations like you are describing as my mates bike had 42 thou of run out. He was rising the bike around & never experienced any noticeable vibrations out of the ordinary.
In saying that though, I guess it is possible if the crank is extremely twisted, but keep in mind, 42thou is huge amount & we could actually watch the crank wobble when rotated.
The balancer gear may have shifted slightly on you. There is a pressed on gear that drives the balancer ahaft. There is a pin on the crank that limits rotating but maybe it's fully shifted and causing the vibration?
I've never seen this happen, and Harley claim that if it does happen there rider would not even know. It's more of safety feature to ensure the balance gear does not shift so far that it collides with the main journal.
Having never experienced a shifted gear I can't give an accurate opinion on what it may feel like.
I would also like the mention that crank cases & main bearings would more that likely be damaged severely if the crank shifted or twisted enough to cause such a violent vibration as you're describing.
Excellent explanation 🤘⚡️🤘✨✨✨
Speaking of the compensator, have you had many issues with the stock comp ramp? Would you recommend upgrading to a darkhorse or star billet? Thanks for the info Tommy 🤙🏽
The stock compensator ramp is rubbish! I highly recommend the billet steel upgraded one from Cycle-Rama.
The only time I suggest a dark horse man-o-war ramp is when a welded Flywheel & heavy duty aftermarket transmission is used.
@MasterTechMiller thank you sir. Always appreciated 🤙🏽
Great video explaining how it works, what increases wear and ways to increase strength for riding styles. Loved it thanks mate
Wow, something "stock" is rubbish? Say that isn't so? So....As a "Master" are you going to send your recommended "fix" or "redesign" to Harley-Davidson?
Also, I what do you do when you notice + .010" runout on a customer's flywheel assembly? Grab another one or do you attempt to fix it yourself? (Can't wait to hear THIS response)
@kennethwise7108 I'm not the one who is big noting about having a far superior design that waiting on a patent that is much better than the Harley engineering team.
You are what we call here in Australia a F#$k Witt.
The video outlines what options there are.
If you’re runout is in spec, allowing you to switch to a gear drive cam chest, is it not going to eventually go over the amount of runout for the gear drive? Or does the gear drive prevent it? Love the channel. Always great content.
Yes the run out can change at any time no matter if it's a gear drive or chain drive. The recommended run out on gear drive cams is lower as the teeth have to mesh properly. If you happen to twist your crank (too much runout) then you may run into trouble with the teeth not meshing
@@MasterTechMiller Thanks for sharing the knowledge . Great channel.
Any runout north of .001" will shorten the lifespan of your lower end DRASTICALLY regardless of what "spec" or "acceptable tolerance" is in their garbage "book".
I still can’t believe they can’t plug that shit from the factory… I mean come on.. how much would it cost per unit to give us a decent (not darkhorse quality of course but maybe SS crank quality) crank ?
Geraldgoodiii. Exactly!
What’s up man! Thanks for the video. I bought a dark horse crank, including screamin eagle lefty bearings on my 05 Dyna. Converting it to 100ci. Will my runout be an issue even though I have the “bulletproof” dark horse crank? Or is there still possibilities to have issues even though I don’t have the Timken bottom end conversion? Thank you.
I have a Lowrider st 2023 with a S&S 475 cam , 55 mm throttle body , 55 injectors , two into 1 Trash in pipe . About 139 torque and 118 hp. It seams fast now , what do you think about going to the 132 S&S . I’m not racing it but like the fun factor . Also have a 128 2020 Road glide special , 55 throttle body , 55 injectors Krome works two into one 475 cam . Is it worth going up to the 132 , and does it get a little hard to handle . FYI use to be HD dealer and build a lot of motors .
I never tried to do a burn out on my bike. But i n wonder once i have power will that change
Fantastic explanation
Glad you liked it
Do you or should you replace your connecting rod bearings? Once the stock crank is welded I t can't be taken apart or reused? Just wondering?
Our guy uses new bearings on the rods when he does these cranks for us.
What flywheel do they use in the 135 . Your videos are very good I’m sure it gets a little involved for some . I use to race flat bottom boats and built a lot of engines . Very good info .
4-5/8" Stroke on the 135ci engines. The 114ci engines run a 4.5" stroke & the 107ci engines run a 4-3/8" stroke.
@@MasterTechMillerI have a 2019 sg with the 107 but I’m going to upgrade to a 129” big bore kit with 550 gear cam. What flywheel do you recommend or will be better to get the stock flywheel welded?
@scottluna4249 Either the S&S flywheel or the Welded OEM is fine.
Just a budget thing is all it comes down to.
Question: In this video, i see that it looks like the sprocket shaft side is barely on the bearings of the stand? I've never seen a stand like this. Is it just for checking true? Most stands here that I've seen or used are much lower and beefy.
I’m getting a subtle but noticeable vibration on my M8 114. It feels like drive train….. like where the cruise control is set and the torque against the rear wheel is -0+. Down shifting or accelerating you don’t notice it but under a zero load I feel a rumbling vibration…. Very soft but it’s noticeable. Almost feel like I need to check my runout left and right to see if I’m having an issue…… I’m a throttle idiot😂
Can anone tell me how much to remove crank, weld assemble it back into the motor and motor into the frame alone in 2024? Just curious .
In Australia, about $3500
Thanks for sharing.
Thanks for watching!
Hi Tommy Which flywheel for a 131 do you recommend and what stroke
I’m doing the 131 with the CR512 darkhorse manowar, evolution complete clutch I don’t do wheelies or stunts. I am known for doing hard down shift at time but not always
Use a 4.5 inch stroke flywheel. S&S Flywheel will be the best bet for longevity
you mentioned downshifting,
so does rev matching while down shifting further damage this part? I almost always use engine breaking first to slow down. could you elaborate
Rev matching while down shifting is fine. Doing that greatly reduces stresses on the driveline.
If you downshift slowly & end up coasting along with the clutch pulled in & and the engine falling to idle speed & then downshift, letting the clutch out, resulting in a high amount of negative stress applied to the driveline, this will increase the risk of crankshaft runout
What is a big downshift for you? Because while I am cruising at 3rpm sometimes I downshift to engine break at the corners… btw I always try to rev match
I would consider a big downshift to be any RPM above 3000rpm without rev matching.
Coasting with the clutch pulled in & the engine at idle, then releasing the clutch without rev matching is also a bad idea
Will a S&S flywheel hold up to popping the clutch and rolling burnouts and wheelies? And not twist?
@jackhorror6719 Much better than an OEM one yes!
@@MasterTechMiller so I shouldn’t have to worry about it twisting, even if I ride kinda hard without the plug being welded?
@@jackhorror6719 Yeah mate
So want to ride it like you stole it does that translate to .. should buy a v rod 👍 ?
yes v V rod! you wont have that problem. at a stop you can rev v rod to above the red line of air cooled HD tractor engines then hold on and dump the clutch!!! im non biased i still have a shovelhead , if you want durable performance vrsc
I learned something my man! Thank you!
Thanks for watching
Great Job
approx. 2 yrs ago, I had a flywheel replaced with a "bullet proof" OEM Flywheel or my '15 HD limited. I have the original flywheel. How can I tell if that flywheel is not 100%? I was told one of the arms wasn't falling freely, but I cant seem to figure that out. It seems like it is falling freely. thanks..
How are you testing this?
@@MasterTechMillerI didn’t. The local shop tested it. I have the OEM flywheel in my garage. Is there a simple test I can do? I set the arms upward and one doesn’t fall down immediately, but if I were to slightly tap it, it does fall down.
My question is, if you are doing performance upgrades, cams, tunes and so on, why aren't welded flywheels recommend to all those clients, I know a few blokes that have had massive engine failure due to this and to say the bikes are only fit for a purpose is a complete cop out! I hope Harley or the Toowoomba dealership honor's the repairs required to get said bikes back in a1 condition!
No young fella buying a breakout is just going to go touring on it are they??
Riding it hard or not, a 35k+ bike shouldn't just fail from a down shift or a burnout!
I think Harley Davidson has a lot to answer for on this one... even Indian do it better with forged 1 pce crank!
Budget. Not everyone can afford a welded crank.
What normally happens is the customer wants to do a stage 2 cam kit to get a better sound & a bit power from their bike.
When they discover just how much it improves the bike they then begin to start having fun with it, either by doing a few test n tune days at the strip or by doing skids.
It's a progression for most of them. I always recommend welded cranks to guys to who tell me they are wanting to give it a hard time.
If you wanna play, you have to pay. It's simple.
Those who tell me they just want to wake it up a bit with a stage 2 cam kit & don't want to spend the extra money on a welded crank then start mucking around racing etc will almost always run into trouble. No 'cop outs here'.
It's just like those 79 series Ute's. They go and buy a highly priced underpowered old tank and the moment you want to tow anything more than a loaded 6x4 box trailer you need to put a heavy duty clutch in it, exhaust, tune & snorkel just to get it to perform as it should by standards.
Harley have an outstanding warranty unmatched by any other manufacturer I know.
No one is stopping anyone from buying an Indian or going down that road with other manufacturers. People just want Harley's over other brands when it comes to big bore V Twin bikes.
Harley offer an unmatched warranty when it comes to performance & backing the products. 2 years, unlimited kilometres & almost everything is covered when it comes to performance upgrades. If people are out of the warranty period & depending on the circumstances Harley offer a good will warranty process available to them if they qualify.
There was a good post /article by a fellow James Russell I think his name is, ''Before you buy a Harley Davidson Motorcycle'' ,if you can find it on net ,about all the issues with the Twin cams etc and in his opinion only the Sportsters [certain years were any good ] fit for purpose by HD standards might be, ''only ridden on weekends and not flogged'' ,judging from the bad engineering /cheap short cuts to save time and money ,its just mind boggling the bad engineering and crank issues etc in this day and age ,realistically, if want a bike to ride hard ,flog ,buy a jap bike ,the only HD I will own, is a late model EVO after you learn their inherent problems and solve them [no big deal really ] with them ,you cant look at a HD and think its like a Jap bike.
Why not key the flywheels
Costs probably?
When I did my stage 2 on my low rider 2023 with s&s 475 with gear drive, my crank run out was 0,0039. Hope that stays in that value… I don’t do any wheelies and burnouts, just cruising and sometimes I like to pull hard on my throttle 🙏
It will be absolutely fine
@@MasterTechMiller thanks for the reply 👌
I believe the issue of run can be severely reduced by religious oil changes. Most bikers just do seasonal oil changes, I do twice a year.
That doesn’t even make sense. Has nothing to do with oil changes. Listen to the video again. He explains it so well
Seasonal? I do every 4k miles .. or try to. Seems I’m going oil every 2 months
@@ashebarley77385 👍
I keep the right air pressure in the rear tire to reduce run.
@@terrellgarren7125 I sometimes makes spaghetti! What? That’s just as relevant as your comment 😎
Great video 👍
Thanks 👍
Great video
Thanks for watching
Hi Tommy, great video!! I always learn a lot from your explanations!! Thanks.
I had a question!? When you replace the pin with a solid steel one, wouldn't there be a problem with unbalancing the weight of the crankshaft? Or does it not affect the balance?
It doesn't effect it at all. The flywheels are not balanced to start with
Port a power -< spreader
That’s why I have a grc
It’s just unacceptable that Harley doesn’t deliver it already welded cuz’ it’s not that hard to do it before assembling. For us as consumers, to get it welded we have to disassemble the entire engine, what costs a lot of money, to have a 20 dollar weld. It’s not about saving money at the assembly line cuz nobody would complain about paying 100 dollars more for a bike that comes with a welded and really reliable crank from the factory.
Unfortunately it's the way it is. Capitalist economy.
If the flywheels twist doesn't that mean the outside crankshaft bearings are worn out. They should be holding the crankshaft in place.
I learned stuff. 👍
So for those of us that do rev matched downshifts .. we are jacking up our cranks each time ?
How are we supposed to slow down?
Just let off and pull in the clutch at 2k and coast ? ?
I'm not sure how you came to that conclusion. Rev matching down shifts are absolutely fine. That's the best way to do it.
Not rev matching down shifts is what causes it
@@MasterTechMiller You have the patience of a saint 😊
I read lugging in too high a gear is also no good
Correct
I don’t understand why wouldn’t S&Ss crank be welded? That makes no sense to me! If they are selling a better crank and rods why wouldn’t it be welded as well since that is the best way to go and they know that, how much more could it possible cost as a specific production part. Makes zero sense to me.
maybe a large crank pin[splined] and higher ft/lb to press together
He left out lugging as I’ve seen a few old timers who aren’t interested in revving out the engine. Especially the guys who got the 110ci cvo
The simple answer is, don't abuse your motor.
Yeah, sure you can strengthen your crankshaft, but all that will do, if you abuse your motor, is wreck your primary or gearbox or both.
You cant have it always.
better to buy a jap bike if you want to flog it
🍻Tommy👍👊
The key reason for NOT using a solid crankshaft is they cannot be overhauled to zero time without an advanced machine shop capable of grinding crank journals properly. That has immensely benefited owners since the tapered crankpin era. The proper term for the "plug" is "crank pin".
@@oldphart-zc3jz Thanks for the input & feedback 👍
Cost cutting is the reason for weak crankshafts.... quality suffers...what a load of B.S. selling my twincam 103 and getting something with decent quality
It's because Harley is lazy. Look at an Indian Thunderstroke crank. It is still a single pin, but it's 5x stronger. The one and only reason Harley and Indian use single pin cranks, is for sound. Simple as that. Indian understood that the ancient "knife and fork" style single pin is incredibly weak, and it absolutely is, so Indian uses a crank pin that is like double the size of Harleys crank pin, and they offset the rods, but only just. Not offset like typical V configured automotive engines, where there's a significant gap between the rods and a balancer between them, but instead the rods sit right next to eachother and in fact, the rods ends ride against eachother as bearing surfaces. It maintains simplicity. It maintains sound. But it increases strength by an astronomical amount.
Help please ….. I have taken all of your awesome advice…. So need help again……my run out on a brand new bike.Has only 3 miles on it if that…. It has a 5thousand run out already.
They just started putting on a 131 kit for me
And now I’m thinking they need to fix the bottom end first. I’ve made them stop ✋🏻….. I trust your expertise!! What should I do? Fix it now ??? Or go with it putting in a 131 with CR 512 … romp will be changed and using the fueling oem cam plate like you do in your builds
I don’t do burn outs or wheelies etc
5thou is absolutely fine. Most bikes are between 3 and 6 straight out of the crate.
It'll be fine if you don't give it a hard time.
@@MasterTechMiller thank for all the advice
@@MasterTechMillerhaaa .003" Start saving up your money for a new mill. 😂
Why is 5 thou "fine"? You can't use gear drive with that much runout. It can't be good for anything, especially BRAND NEW. I'd tell the dealer to take it back