Not just that, Constant mesh transmissions in motorcycles use synchromesh most of the time these days (even though they still use the gear-neutral-gear selector drum). Which is a type of constant mesh gearbox developed by GM with a whole team of engineers. So far from the 'inventor-entrepreneur' capitalist ideal Eat Shit's idolizing to boot. They still make more then he does though, most likely.
nobody invented this design only improving upon previous iteration of the design. it is called cumulative knowledge. i hope i don't appear to be argumentative
I've worked on motorcycles since 1979. And I'm a degreed mechanical engineer. This is the best explanation I've ever seen! Some of those old GM videos showing how car rear axles and other things are on par with this, but you also have a much better narrator:) Thank you for creating this video!!
Hey man can you give me some advice about how to get an engineering job? This is random but I've been unemployed since last year and I have a masters degree in Me
@@FLMKane Can I ask what area you're from? Here in the Northeast, there are far more engineering jobs than there are engineers. You might have to be open to moving to an area with a lot of tech jobs if you're having trouble where you are currently. I am still a student, but many of my friends are already involved with internships that have offered them full time positions upon graduation
Funny, I’ve had the gear sets in my hands many times, disassembled and reassembled transmissions in my dirt bikes but didn’t really understand how they functioned until I watched this video. Thanks.
Yes same here, I was just the changing bearings on my suzuki RM125 rotating the transmission trying to figure out why some gears are half way meshed, now it makes sense. What a great video.
Yeah man, I've learned a huge amount from this type of content in the past 3 years since I have uncapped fibre. I've always bought the Haynes manual for my current vehicle, now I have that and the experience of countless mechanics and home DIY men as reference, what a blessing.
It’s so simple yet such an intimidating subject. Thank you for finally explaining a motorcycle transmission to me. I’ve always just accepted that it’s magic and those who do transmission work are just secretly wizards
@@GeofreySanders It sounded like typical "Japanese English". It's extremely difficult to translate to English with completely proper grammar if your native language is Japanese (I base this on all the English instructions I've read for products made in Japan). I'm cutting them some slack for that. Anyone who can speak both of those languages and translate even poorly is smarter than I am.
This false neutrals occur when shifting improper way. Wrong rev match. Not pushing the gearbox leaver before the actual shift. and or Not pushing it long enough. Animation in this video is very good. If you watch it closely and with understanding, then you can learn how to eliminate false neutrals, have *huge* satisfaction from riding properly and keep your gearbox from breaking completely.
Visually, the gear sizes are exaggerated for presentation purposes and are not to scale, as some gears may appear unrealistic. But the positions and shifting are correct (including 4th and 5th gears )and match with that of real life gearbox.
Perfect video and explains everything great. I was hoping to learn why my 2 Harley's and Honda all clunk hard going from 1st to 2nd but not the other gears. Watching several times even at slow motion I couldn't quite figure it out. Thanks for your great videos.
I needed a gear selection explanation to send a friend and found this one. Hey! I was the technical director of a Japanese motorcycle brand for 14 years and never saw anything this good. Who need's the factory tear-down manual? Brilliant! Well done you folks.
Awesome video, Thanks. Explains why bike transmissions rarely have problems even though we tend to be rougher on them. Why clutchles shifting works better on bikes, even why I ocasionally get neutral when I accidentally fail to press the lever all the way.
@Corn On The Colb hate explaining the joke, but the comment you're replying to is implying that Honda gearboxes aren't modern in their design, for comedic effect
As an engineer, I want to say this is one of the best explainitory videos I have ever seen. No BS, and it clearly explains what the title says the video is about. Bravo
I was a mechanic many years ago. Did play with an occasional gearbox in changing sync cones and swapping out a gear or two. Easy enough but how someone designed then made these was beyond comprehension. Pulling a motor was fun & simple enough as we did quite a few of them, loved pulling apart the V8s then putting them back together along with many diesel engines. Differentials were in the gearbox category but to then explain how to pull apart and rebuild an auto transmission was another level. If doing it everyday, then it may have become clearer. Thanks for your video.
As someone who has every intention of taking a motorcycle engineering/maintenance course in the near future, this video serves as a wonderful introductory piece, and really charges up the interest in seeing how this sort of thing might work in real life. Every thanks for this, and hoping that there are more episodes to come in the series.
What a brilliant and beautifully prepared video. I have been riding motorcycles since 1964 and teaching motorcycle servicing, maintenance and engineering for almost 20 years. This is the best, clearest, most accurate and detailed demonstration I have ever seen. Congratulations.
I could listen to this woman s voice count to 9 billion twice and still be captivated. Also the video is very well made, everytime a question popped in my head they addressed it but more importantly they addressed a whole lotta stuff i didnt even think about. i give to this video a perfect 5\7.
One of the best educational animations I've ever seen with very good explanation of what is going on. This would've been diamond when as kid I opened up my Suzuki engine cases trying to be careful, but dropping loads stuff into table without ever seeing how they were in engine. Luckily I got few pages of some spare part catalogue to see how they could fit back 😂
So this is synchromesh gearing. I've heard it for decades but I never visualised it before. This makes total sense! The notched free gears are still rotating with the rest of the system but without power delivery until the keyed gears are slid into them. This is really clever!
That was interesting! When on the bike i always wondered what the shifter pedal actually did. But when not on the bike i never think about it. So, now i got my answer. Thanks 👍
Wow, excellent explanation and video! Now I understand the term "constant mesh" and why it's the dogs that break. I've broken two motorcycle gearboxes and fixed them myself, but didn't know much about how it actually worked. Love the animations! Couldn't be any better or easier to understand than this.
Nicely Done - So many are totally confused how this works, crashing Gear Dogs hitting first gear with cold engine, and clutch pack cold is glued solid.
Pretty good video with the exception that 1st gear on the input shaft is known as a fixed gear and rotates constantly with the shaft. And that some times the splined sliders are used in such a way that they become fixed gears themselves to complete the power flow. Also showing a power flow chart might have been useful.
"We hope you learned something today. Thanks for watching." I learned alot! Videos like this are saved in my watch list to be viewed over and over until I have it memorized. Thanks for an outstanding educational video.
Funny thing, I already knew this because years ago I was curious and looked in one of those aftermarket repair manuals you can get for most popular bikes. The photos of transmission disassembly made the workings of the shift process very clear to me, but I still think it's really cool that someone put this in a video and did such a nice job with their explanation.
those gear interactions between dog gears and non dog gears explains the play you get when in gear but the engine is off where you can roll a little forward or backward before the transmission stops you.
That's a big thing to teach someone new to riding moto, that the shifter needs turning to work; hard to explain, easy to demonstrate if a bike is present- ' just do this' ( rock, shake bike a bit, click!)
Can you please explain why that would happen? Logic tells me the wheels shouldn't even rotate with the transmission engaged unless the engine is actually rotating.
I didn't learn anything except how they look and work this video is for engineering and tech students as a doctor who is a bike enthusiast, this flew over my head
Really fantastic video. As a hobbyist stunt bike rider and professional idiot, can confirm these gearboxes are resilient as all hell. Tens if not hundreds of thousands of smacks from neutral into first while idling 4k rpm, among other abuses, and still works near flawlessly.
that was absolutely bloody brilliant. explains literally everything i need to know, and in a super simple way. my dirt bike has a slipping third gear. this video will make it soooo much easier to diagnose and figure out once i finally get around to pulling it apart. :-)
It is extremely important to keep every washer gear and clip in the same position as it was. Make sure everything is facing the same direction too. If you miss a single washer it can cause major functionality flaws. If you can find a service manual diagram it’s a big help.
If by 'slipping' you mean it jumps out of gear at times, especially under hard acceleration, then the chances are you have a slightly bent selector fork. This can be caused by riding with your foot on, or under the gear lever and applying a very slight pressure while you are riding, even if you don't realise you are doing it. It causes the fork to rub excessively hard on the groove in the sliding dog and that causes heat and wear and the fork bends a little. Just being slightly bent can mean the engagement dog clutch teeth don't fully connect with the holes in the adjacent gear and under hard acceleration they jump apart. Usual cure unfortunately is a new selector fork, sliding gear and the gear next to the dog clutch. And gaskets and oil of course.
Thank you for creating this. I am a lifetime motorcycle rider and although I have seen the inside of motorcycle transmissions many times, this demonstrates the actual function better than any book I have ever seen. Well done!
I've been trying to get the concept of neutral in a a car transmission but no animation specifically explains it, this finally made everything dock. Well made.
Isn't this a miracle? And also, despite riding the bikes for last 20 years I just couldn't understand how a gearbox works. Now I am a bit smarter, thank you for this animation!
ive torn bikes down but never really knew how the transmission works, you understand it alot better when you can visualize whats happening while youre shifting.
It would be great if you can make a video like this telling about CVT(Constantly Variable Transmission) and how do they work on moyorcycles and cars alike
and what is not said, is very well understandable, as the fork moving the gears through the drum, and how the wholem mechanism is able to rotate at any time....BRAVISSIMO !
There are some very handy mathematical formulae that can be used. And a few assistive tools that existed before the advent of CAD/CAM software. The short answer is: It takes a long damn time to engineer something like this. And almost as long for the 'Syncromesh' system that's supplanted this (it works in the same way, except the gears in red don't actually slide either. They are locked/disengaged with a separate device called a synchronizer that the forks move, it shifts way smoother and wears much less) despite those being designed on a computer.
I knew this, but never seen such good graphics to explain it. I had to study this on paper technical drawings. Young engineering students are very lucky to have these ressources.
Best video I've seen yet of a motorcycle transmission. It shows animations you can't show even in gearbox teardown videos. So that's why false neutrals can happen sometimes in motorcycles.
I am going to reiterate what everyone else has said...this video is awesome. I seriously had a lightbulb moment watching all of you motorcycle videos! Thank you for making something so equal parts informative & easy to understand & digest.
Everyone who rides should have to watch this whether they plan to turn a wrench on their own bike or not. The knowledge of how your bike works is very important in my opinion.
Some manual transmissions seem like someone took a file and went over the star for like 2 seconds expecting it to be the neutral valley (when shifting from first and second and also rocking the bike till it finally clicks into place).
Ascendant i have that problem on bmw f700gs 😂 coming to a stop, going from second to neutr- NOPE FIRST GEAR! Okay just geeeently touch the lever to get it into neutral. *touches it gently, nothing. Adds a tiny bit more force, nothing. Adds a tiny tiny bit more force, SECOND GEAR*. God damnit
@@HeyAddieImTojo I had that same problem as well on my old bike. as long as it was still moving, it was at least possible to switch to neutral if I was very careful, but if I came to a complete stop and then tried to shift into neutral, it was close to impossible. Always shifted right into the next gear. Oddly enough, as soon as the engine was off, it wasn't a problem at all to find neutral position.
I'm no mechanic, but this is by far the most simplistic design I have ever seen for any kind of transmission. Makes me wonder why they don't implement that in more cars today. It'd probably be much better than most of those complex automatic transmissions which relies on a computer to shift.
This is even better than my usual mindfulness practicing! The narration on its own brings me to a higher state of motorcycling consciousness. I think I am going to combine this with yoga and see what happens.
People don't understand how much time goes into modeling, animating and rendering. Great animation!
Industrial designers have an amazing skill set.
❤
coloring those gears made it more easy to understand.
bullet green hands down to this, made so much more sense
who ever invented this is a genius without reasonable doubt!
Eat Shit imagine bringing politics into a an engineering video. Snowflakes really like to let everyone know that they’re upset
Not just that, Constant mesh transmissions in motorcycles use synchromesh most of the time these days (even though they still use the gear-neutral-gear selector drum). Which is a type of constant mesh gearbox developed by GM with a whole team of engineers. So far from the 'inventor-entrepreneur' capitalist ideal Eat Shit's idolizing to boot. They still make more then he does though, most likely.
@@eatshit2863 , because she's an America hating demon loving communist.
Leviticus 23
and
Deuteronomy 28.
nobody invented this design only improving upon previous iteration of the design. it is called cumulative knowledge. i hope i don't appear to be argumentative
sugar glider good call. finally someone inputting actual information rather than arguing about a topic that has litteraly nothing to do with this
I've worked on motorcycles since 1979. And I'm a degreed mechanical engineer. This is the best explanation I've ever seen! Some of those old GM videos showing how car rear axles and other things are on par with this, but you also have a much better narrator:)
Thank you for creating this video!!
Hey man can you give me some advice about how to get an engineering job? This is random but I've been unemployed since last year and I have a masters degree in Me
@@FLMKane Can I ask what area you're from? Here in the Northeast, there are far more engineering jobs than there are engineers. You might have to be open to moving to an area with a lot of tech jobs if you're having trouble where you are currently. I am still a student, but many of my friends are already involved with internships that have offered them full time positions upon graduation
@@FLMKane и
💯🌹
@@JonB239 which place are you referring to , btw?
Funny, I’ve had the gear sets in my hands many times, disassembled and reassembled transmissions in my dirt bikes but didn’t really understand how they functioned until I watched this video. Thanks.
Yes same here, I was just the changing bearings on my suzuki RM125 rotating the transmission trying to figure out why some gears are half way meshed, now it makes sense. What a great video.
Well said! I know exactly how you feel!!
Omg lol. Ive been riding and racing 30 years and never could visualize it. Probably should watch the video twice, how crazy.
Same here on a Yamaha gearbox you can misalign the neutral position and it comes between 2nd and 3rd
Same, I was forced to learn when I started to customise the gear ratios and count teeth
If only there was a such fine video back when I was starting to firgure out and fix bikes... Great explanation!
Yeah man, I've learned a huge amount from this type of content in the past 3 years since I have uncapped fibre. I've always bought the Haynes manual for my current vehicle, now I have that and the experience of countless mechanics and home DIY men as reference, what a blessing.
🇱🇹
@@skeler3759 88 HH SH
It’s so simple yet such an intimidating subject. Thank you for finally explaining a motorcycle transmission to me. I’ve always just accepted that it’s magic and those who do transmission work are just secretly wizards
Same lmao
Well done on the video. A lot of these technical channels have terrible narration or inaccurate animations. Nice to see one done well.
Grammar was funky. Lots of missing articles.
@@GeofreySanders True, funky writing, but effective anyway
Agreed. This was very informative. Granted, I had to watch it 3 times but that's my fault.
@@GeofreySanders It sounded like typical "Japanese English". It's extremely difficult to translate to English with completely proper grammar if your native language is Japanese (I base this on all the English instructions I've read for products made in Japan). I'm cutting them some slack for that. Anyone who can speak both of those languages and translate even poorly is smarter than I am.
Because it's indian
The level of detail in the explanation is amazing!
Pretty sure the star shift detent mechanism in my 2006 Ducati Monster has a neutral spot ground in between EVERY DAMN GEAR.
That's why you buy a new drum and change the old one
Its a false neutral dont worry
This false neutrals occur when shifting improper way.
Wrong rev match.
Not pushing the gearbox leaver before the actual shift.
and or
Not pushing it long enough.
Animation in this video is very good. If you watch it closely and with understanding, then you can learn how to eliminate false neutrals, have *huge* satisfaction from riding properly and keep your gearbox from breaking completely.
If you will practice, then you will be able to shift gears in much less than 0.5s, up and down, without false neutrals.
Seems like an easy fix, then - just remachine a star plate.
Visually, the gear sizes are exaggerated for presentation purposes and are not to scale, as some gears may appear unrealistic. But the positions and shifting are correct (including 4th and 5th gears )and match with that of real life gearbox.
I did learn something , thank you. I leaned that I wish I had a 6 speed bike.
can i download your video?
Yes you can
Perfect video and explains everything great. I was hoping to learn why my 2 Harley's and Honda all clunk hard going from 1st to 2nd but not the other gears. Watching several times even at slow motion I couldn't quite figure it out. Thanks for your great videos.
@@jefffrayer8238 clutch basket wear
I needed a gear selection explanation to send a friend and found this one. Hey! I was the technical director of a Japanese motorcycle brand for 14 years and never saw anything this good. Who need's the factory tear-down manual?
Brilliant! Well done you folks.
'This *brief pause* is the neutral position of the motorcycle'
Wow, this gave me chills.
That is the best illustration I have EVER seen for motorcycle transmissions. I feel like I truly understand it for the first time!!!
Awesome video, Thanks.
Explains why bike transmissions rarely have problems even though we tend to be rougher on them. Why clutchles shifting works better on bikes, even why I ocasionally get neutral when I accidentally fail to press the lever all the way.
This is first vidwo that explain neutral posision in motorcycle!
I learned more from this video than in my 4 years of engineering
🤣 🤣 🤣 🤣My god this is exactly what I was thinking
bruuuh, ypuutbe is the new university. for real
@I killed that beard guy this is a video explanation, not a "practical" whatever.
If you learned more from this video than on your 4 years of engineering, you aren't studying well. I learned this from a book years ago...
And yet, it was the 4 years of engineering school that allows you to see why that works well, and to quickly grasp, when being shown...
THANK YOU for being the first ever person to explain why the neutral is in between 1st and 2nd. I never understood it, until now.
"We find neutral position only between 1st and 2nd gear"
Modern Honda gearbox: AHEM?!?!
Whats "modern honda gearbox"? :D
Don’t wanna be that guy, but my 2019 cb650r never gave me a false neutral so I guess they’re not that bad 😂
Harley Davidson Street Rod: imma forget about that ridge thingy. You can stay on first gear and keep the clutch disengaged with your hand.
Get a quickshifter, like on my Yamaha MT10...
@Corn On The Colb hate explaining the joke, but the comment you're replying to is implying that Honda gearboxes aren't modern in their design, for comedic effect
As an engineer, I want to say this is one of the best explainitory videos I have ever seen. No BS, and it clearly explains what the title says the video is about. Bravo
I feel truly blessed to have stumbled upon this channel. I love the professional presentation of these various mechanisms.
I was a mechanic many years ago. Did play with an occasional gearbox in changing sync cones and swapping out a gear or two. Easy enough but how someone designed then made these was beyond comprehension. Pulling a motor was fun & simple enough as we did quite a few of them, loved pulling apart the V8s then putting them back together along with many diesel engines. Differentials were in the gearbox category but to then explain how to pull apart and rebuild an auto transmission was another level. If doing it everyday, then it may have become clearer. Thanks for your video.
yeah this is a perfect demonstration as to how this works, and for gearheads who didn't know how bike's worked!
That is without doubt the best explanation of a motorcycle gearbox, EVER.
Instructions unclear, I am now addicted to ASMR gearbox descriptions.
As someone who has every intention of taking a motorcycle engineering/maintenance course in the near future, this video serves as a wonderful introductory piece, and really charges up the interest in seeing how this sort of thing might work in real life. Every thanks for this, and hoping that there are more episodes to come in the series.
I love this, especially because it explains why neutral can be difficult to find while shifting, it's a little harder to physically match up with!
and that's also the reason why motorbikes have a signal light on the cockpit for neutral position, while most manual cars usually don't
What a brilliant and beautifully prepared video. I have been riding motorcycles since 1964 and teaching motorcycle servicing, maintenance and engineering for almost 20 years. This is the best, clearest, most accurate and detailed demonstration I have ever seen. Congratulations.
That helped me understand why it feels how it does when you shif through, thank you that's an awesome way to help visual learners.
I could listen to this woman s voice count to 9 billion twice and still be captivated. Also the video is very well made, everytime a question popped in my head they addressed it but more importantly they addressed a whole lotta stuff i didnt even think about. i give to this video a perfect 5\7.
One of the best educational animations I've ever seen with very good explanation of what is going on. This would've been diamond when as kid I opened up my Suzuki engine cases trying to be careful, but dropping loads stuff into table without ever seeing how they were in engine. Luckily I got few pages of some spare part catalogue to see how they could fit back 😂
So this is synchromesh gearing. I've heard it for decades but I never visualised it before. This makes total sense! The notched free gears are still rotating with the rest of the system but without power delivery until the keyed gears are slid into them. This is really clever!
Beautifully articulated! I've been slacking on learning something new every day, & this ought to hold me over for a few!
She sounds so soothing explaining complex mechanism
I'm getting into motorcycles and I was confused about a lot of this stuff, but this video answered all of my questions! Thanks!
This information helps me shift better and makes me understand the process I'm doing hundreds of times a day on my own motorcycle
That was interesting! When on the bike i always wondered what the shifter pedal actually did. But when not on the bike i never think about it. So, now i got my answer. Thanks 👍
I used this to help my grandson understand how the transmission works. GREAT JOB !
Now I can finally understand why I grind a gears trying to get back into 1st or 2nd after misshifting into neutrual.
I believe its because you are having to shove the dog gear into the already spinning gear.
This is by far the best explanation ever about a motorcycle transmission.
Honestly, I've had kind of a hard time of understanding what's going on when shifting gears.
Thanks, I get it now
One of the best explanation of this kind of transmission I’ve ever seen.
Wow, excellent explanation and video! Now I understand the term "constant mesh" and why it's the dogs that break. I've broken two motorcycle gearboxes and fixed them myself, but didn't know much about how it actually worked. Love the animations! Couldn't be any better or easier to understand than this.
p
mk ho
ob😊h
Nicely Done - So many are totally confused how this works, crashing Gear Dogs hitting first gear with cold engine, and clutch pack cold is glued solid.
Pretty good video with the exception that 1st gear on the input shaft is known as a fixed gear and rotates constantly with the shaft. And that some times the splined sliders are used in such a way that they become fixed gears themselves to complete the power flow. Also showing a power flow chart might have been useful.
"We hope you learned something today. Thanks for watching."
I learned alot! Videos like this are saved in my watch list to be viewed over and over until I have it memorized. Thanks for an outstanding educational video.
That explains everything I feel when shifting the motorcycle gears
I never thought I would understand transmission it seemed way more complex but this animation made me realize how simple it really is
Funny thing, I already knew this because years ago I was curious and looked in one of those aftermarket repair manuals you can get for most popular bikes. The photos of transmission disassembly made the workings of the shift process very clear to me, but I still think it's really cool that someone put this in a video and did such a nice job with their explanation.
This is probably the best, clearer, and most concise explanation & rendering on the subject. Kudos to the creator.
Nice graphics
I understand everything
I am a mechanical engineer....this video is outstanding,.......the whole channel is!!!! congrats and many thx!
those gear interactions between dog gears and non dog gears explains the play you get when in gear but the engine is off where you can roll a little forward or backward before the transmission stops you.
I think the term for that is "lash" but i could be wrong.
That's a big thing to teach someone new to riding moto, that the shifter needs turning to work; hard to explain, easy to demonstrate if a bike is present- ' just do this' ( rock, shake bike a bit, click!)
Can you please explain why that would happen? Logic tells me the wheels shouldn't even rotate with the transmission engaged unless the engine is actually rotating.
I didn't learn anything except how they look and work
this video is for engineering and tech students
as a doctor who is a bike enthusiast, this flew over my head
I did "learn something " today...
Thanks for showing.
I could listen to her explain gears all night !! very well illustrated .
why is this in my recommended at 3 in the morning
Remember 3 am is best of UA-cam recomendation ngl
If only schools teach you this simple and straight to the point....
Great animation and explanation . Thanks
Really fantastic video. As a hobbyist stunt bike rider and professional idiot, can confirm these gearboxes are resilient as all hell. Tens if not hundreds of thousands of smacks from neutral into first while idling 4k rpm, among other abuses, and still works near flawlessly.
that was absolutely bloody brilliant. explains literally everything i need to know, and in a super simple way. my dirt bike has a slipping third gear. this video will make it soooo much easier to diagnose and figure out once i finally get around to pulling it apart. :-)
It is extremely important to keep every washer gear and clip in the same position as it was. Make sure everything is facing the same direction too. If you miss a single washer it can cause major functionality flaws. If you can find a service manual diagram it’s a big help.
If by 'slipping' you mean it jumps out of gear at times, especially under hard acceleration, then the chances are you have a slightly bent selector fork. This can be caused by riding with your foot on, or under the gear lever and applying a very slight pressure while you are riding, even if you don't realise you are doing it. It causes the fork to rub excessively hard on the groove in the sliding dog and that causes heat and wear and the fork bends a little. Just being slightly bent can mean the engagement dog clutch teeth don't fully connect with the holes in the adjacent gear and under hard acceleration they jump apart. Usual cure unfortunately is a new selector fork, sliding gear and the gear next to the dog clutch. And gaskets and oil of course.
Thank you for creating this. I am a lifetime motorcycle rider and although I have seen the inside of motorcycle transmissions many times, this demonstrates the actual function better than any book I have ever seen. Well done!
Very well said!
Thank you so so much for this video!
I've been trying to get the concept of neutral in a a car transmission but no animation specifically explains it, this finally made everything dock. Well made.
and that means I will now never consider taking apart my gearbox
Glen Burrows made me want to have a go one time
I watched. I learned. I am still in awe of the people that designed the transmission in cars, trucks, motorcycles.
It's amazing what people invented before we all became cell phone zombies.
Lol true
Isn't this a miracle?
And also, despite riding the bikes for last 20 years I just couldn't understand how a gearbox works. Now I am a bit smarter, thank you for this animation!
This lady's voice put me to sleep faster than my math homework
this is the best graphical explanation i have seen so far
306 People are probably CVT fans
ive torn bikes down but never really knew how the transmission works, you understand it alot better when you can visualize whats happening while youre shifting.
It would be great if you can make a video like this telling about CVT(Constantly Variable Transmission) and how do they work on moyorcycles and cars alike
I can give you the answer: CVTs work like shit
Its just like changing your sprocket size, but automatically
glad I watched this. Great explanation since I knew nothing beforehand. I subscribed to learn more.
Well, that makes sense, now I know my output shaft is the one giving me problems, since it falls into neutral shifting into second and into fifth
and what is not said, is very well understandable, as the fork moving the gears through the drum, and how the wholem mechanism is able to rotate at any time....BRAVISSIMO !
I come to this video about once a month to remember the magic below my sketchy decisions
👍😜👍
This is the very best explanation of how any transmission works I have ever seen Well done thanks
This is so cool
This is a lovely animation along with clear, crisp, lucid explanations! Beautiful! Thank you ❤❤
how in the world would you count all that dimensions on shapes and Angel soo precisely to move 3 guider pins?? mind blowing
Yeah thinking of these things give me anxiety.
Engineering and ratios. Japanese precision 👌🏼
Yeah, and these things were already there before 3D model drawings on computers and stuff! There were more sophisticated and accurate things tho
There are some very handy mathematical formulae that can be used. And a few assistive tools that existed before the advent of CAD/CAM software. The short answer is: It takes a long damn time to engineer something like this. And almost as long for the 'Syncromesh' system that's supplanted this (it works in the same way, except the gears in red don't actually slide either. They are locked/disengaged with a separate device called a synchronizer that the forks move, it shifts way smoother and wears much less) despite those being designed on a computer.
I learned here in 6 minutes more than i learn at school for one year. Thx for these amazing videos ❤
any device that has a “shifter shaft” has my respect.
And if your shifter shaft becomes worn out, you take the bike to a shaft shifter ;)
I knew this, but never seen such good graphics to explain it. I had to study this on paper technical drawings. Young engineering students are very lucky to have these ressources.
"Neutral only between first and second gears"
My AM6 : hahaa gearbox go boom
Yes, happens to me all the time
Ha, same. Didn't expect another Moped-guy here...
Easily one of the best channels for this sort of things.
Before this video I had my own crazy ideas, maybe you as well.
Best video I've seen yet of a motorcycle transmission. It shows animations you can't show even in gearbox teardown videos. So that's why false neutrals can happen sometimes in motorcycles.
3:57 thats why there is that false neutral i get every now and then XD
Yep. Ya gotta COMMIT when shifting gears. My old ZX11 had a neutrals all over. My new BMWs have none apparent.
Thanks to this video I loved this mechanism so much that I bought a broken 1996 YZF 1000 Thunderace gearbox to admire it. Genius's work.
Cool now could you do a video on those scooter "gearboxes" :)
You are talking about a CVT. They aren't gearboxes, because there are no gears.
@@Bassplayer2735 no bro they have gears you can google it
I am going to reiterate what everyone else has said...this video is awesome. I seriously had a lightbulb moment watching all of you motorcycle videos! Thank you for making something so equal parts informative & easy to understand & digest.
Motorcycle is one of the best transport in all over country i loved it engine of motorcycle i had bazaz which was good but now i sold it
Everyone who rides should have to watch this whether they plan to turn a wrench on their own bike or not. The knowledge of how your bike works is very important in my opinion.
Some manual transmissions seem like someone took a file and went over the star for like 2 seconds expecting it to be the neutral valley (when shifting from first and second and also rocking the bike till it finally clicks into place).
Ascendant i have that problem on bmw f700gs 😂 coming to a stop, going from second to neutr- NOPE FIRST GEAR! Okay just geeeently touch the lever to get it into neutral. *touches it gently, nothing. Adds a tiny bit more force, nothing. Adds a tiny tiny bit more force, SECOND GEAR*. God damnit
@@HeyAddieImTojo I had that same problem as well on my old bike. as long as it was still moving, it was at least possible to switch to neutral if I was very careful, but if I came to a complete stop and then tried to shift into neutral, it was close to impossible. Always shifted right into the next gear. Oddly enough, as soon as the engine was off, it wasn't a problem at all to find neutral position.
I'm no mechanic, but this is by far the most simplistic design I have ever seen for any kind of transmission. Makes me wonder why they don't implement that in more cars today. It'd probably be much better than most of those complex automatic transmissions which relies on a computer to shift.
I’ll use this as an ASMR
This is even better than my usual mindfulness practicing! The narration on its own brings me to a higher state of motorcycling consciousness. I think I am going to combine this with yoga and see what happens.
2:06 the gear is moved off its axis and its driving me crazy!!!
Shit I should've never read this now it was bothering the shit out of me. Like hearing some scratch a chalk board.
Right
But I don't care because the video is still so awesome for me.
After 100ds of videos on transmission, only this was detailed and it cleared the concept like eating a butter 🤩.।। Thanks