Now I believe I have the auto-clutch adjusted correctly.
But before going there a few words about it. I hope this answers Milco’s question how it works and feels.
In a way the name is misleading,
clutch basically works from about around 1000 rpm to 1500 rpm. Meaning, in idle it does disengage the clutch, and hand lever is totally limb, add throttle and bike takes off smoothly and lever “activates” with rpm. After maybe 2500 rpm the lever looks, feels and works like a normal clutch -except it is light, one finger operation! No broken cables any more.
When you shift without using lever on higher rpm, I would still call it power-shifting, though it kind of feels smoother…dunno.
Clever thing is when you pull the lever, let rpm settle to idle -lever goes limb and you have no engine brake, clutch is and stays disengaged. You can either stop, change gear, or add some throttle and you are back in business. Rather handy in traffic or say in parades etc.
When standing still mine doesn’t try to creep at all, and finding neutral is easier than ever, gears just “click" on.
As you can see, I use lever while shifting, old habit maybe, but it feels so light and nice now…. On standstill I do not use lever, there is no reason to.
The clutch doesn’t seem to slip at all over 1500 rpm, and on takeoffs it pretty much feels like it would when you takeoff with manual clutch.
Adjusting the beast is a bit more tricky than original clutch, I’ll write another post about that.
:2thumbs:
Tapio