It's a slam back, slam forward, and one of those is going to break the clutch free so you can walk it. No low gear. The ratio is off. With dead engine remember, the lever is never touched. So go back and forth and shift to top gear. Now pull the lever in and go back and forth to break the plates loose.When the bike is off, in gear, and I pull in the clutch I still cannot roll it like other bikes I've had.
No.Is it imperative that the bike be "upright" (level) when adjusting the clutch?
Yes.I did it with it on the kick stand. Do you adjust the clutch with cold engine temp as I did?
I believe that is up for discussion. I think I tried both ways. No clutch wear and a loose pri chain was hard finding N. Since the plates were looking beautiful, I set the pri tighter by hand feel, not book measurements. No complaints so far.Primary chain adjustment effects the clutch adjustment?
The engagement is one set of plates remain stationary with the rear wheel. The other plates move with the engine. Let the clutch out, one plate moves into the next [collapse into] and this drag begins to move the rear wheel. First to lock or cause friction are the rears, or the farthest plates from the set screw. Those burnout first.(I can see the finding N part, but actual clutch engagement is kinda baffling to me.)
.Clutch never slipped and still does not before and after all this.
To see if a clutch is going bad is to see where the collapse begins:
a. Bike moves when lever leaves hand grip = Good to Excellent.
b. Bike moves when the lever is at the middle between grip and perch = Worn.