Cures* flickering oil lights at idle if you don't filter the oil.richardthestag wrote: ↑Tue Jun 02, 2020 12:55 pm
On the Triumph oil filter that bottom retaining washer has some form of non return valve built into it, same as TR7 and Dolly. My current stag had it missing when I bought it 26 years ago. Yay unfiltered oil. Seems to be quite a common issue I guess.
1968 Austin 1100 Mk1 (Take 2)
- Hooli
- Self Appointed Internet God
- Posts: 33543
- Joined: Mon Apr 08, 2019 9:25 pm
- Has thanked: 14345 times
- Been thanked: 11128 times
Re: 1968 Austin 1100 Mk1 (Take 2)
Private signature, do not read
-
- It's S small i C
- Posts: 9373
- Joined: Sun Apr 28, 2019 8:59 am
- Has thanked: 1826 times
- Been thanked: 5404 times
Re: 1968 Austin 1100 Mk1 (Take 2)
Yeah there is a spring and a sealing washer on the bottom. So if the filter is filthy, it can bypass around it. On the ADO16 they include a sensing circuit if the pressure in the filter gets too high to light up a light in the car. Idea being if the filter is providing too high a pressure differential, it warns you that a filter change is needed immediately.
- Hooli
- Self Appointed Internet God
- Posts: 33543
- Joined: Mon Apr 08, 2019 9:25 pm
- Has thanked: 14345 times
- Been thanked: 11128 times
Re: 1968 Austin 1100 Mk1 (Take 2)
I didn't know that. So variable service intervals are nothing new either then.
Private signature, do not read
-
- It's S small i C
- Posts: 9373
- Joined: Sun Apr 28, 2019 8:59 am
- Has thanked: 1826 times
- Been thanked: 5404 times
Re: 1968 Austin 1100 Mk1 (Take 2)
Yeah 6000 mile oil change intervals on these modern cars is so reckless!
- richardthestag
- Posts: 613
- Joined: Mon Aug 26, 2019 10:02 pm
- Location: Out of the fucking EU
- Has thanked: 557 times
- Been thanked: 942 times
Re: 1968 Austin 1100 Mk1 (Take 2)
3000miles on Rover v8 and every year on the triumph v8 which last year was 258miles
"The Dark Wob. You will never find a more wretched hive of scum and villainy. We must be cautious."
- Hooli
- Self Appointed Internet God
- Posts: 33543
- Joined: Mon Apr 08, 2019 9:25 pm
- Has thanked: 14345 times
- Been thanked: 11128 times
Re: 1968 Austin 1100 Mk1 (Take 2)
Better than the 1,000mile oil change intervals on bikes of that time. But then they didn't have any proper oil filters & needed an engine strip every 30,000mile or so to clean the centrifugal sludge trap inside the crankshaft.
Private signature, do not read
- Eddie Honda
- Rainman The Google Fu Master
- Posts: 21559
- Joined: Tue Apr 09, 2019 10:45 pm
- Location: 寄居町
- Has thanked: 13450 times
- Been thanked: 13265 times
- Hooli
- Self Appointed Internet God
- Posts: 33543
- Joined: Mon Apr 08, 2019 9:25 pm
- Has thanked: 14345 times
- Been thanked: 11128 times
Re: 1968 Austin 1100 Mk1 (Take 2)
Yup, it's one of the jobs I'll be doing on mine once it comes apart. Have a youtube vid showing reasonably clean one.Eddie Honda wrote: ↑Tue Jun 02, 2020 2:42 pmAre you sure? Most traps I've seen are inside the crankcase.
[youtube][/youtube]
Private signature, do not read
Re: 1968 Austin 1100 Mk1 (Take 2)
On my BSAs there is a plug screwed into one of the flywheel circumferences, peened in place.Eddie Honda wrote: ↑Tue Jun 02, 2020 2:42 pmAre you sure? Most traps I've seen are inside the crankcase.
Unscrew it (impact driver job) and then use drill bits to get the compacted crud out.
BSA's flywheels are usually part of the crankshaft,
sometimes they can become an integral part of the crankcase
but when that happens oil filtering in not a priority any more.
Triumph, Norton, Enfield and Moto Guzzi have variations on the crankshaft sludge trap I have experienced.
Some later bikes had a centrifugal oil filter system, for example the SS50 had such a thing in the middle of its clutch.
- Eddie Honda
- Rainman The Google Fu Master
- Posts: 21559
- Joined: Tue Apr 09, 2019 10:45 pm
- Location: 寄居町
- Has thanked: 13450 times
- Been thanked: 13265 times