Hub, with all due respect, I understand Brock clearly and he is saying if the Bellville spring had an imaginary cone tip it would face outboard, away from the engine.
I studied that drawing in the manual that shows the Bellville spring and at first I thought it was pointing in like you say but after looking up a standard engineering cross sectional drawing of a Bellville it is apparent that indeed the cone faces outboard just like Brock says in the video and Dave is saying.
What had got me wondering, #2 steel shows a wear pattern suspiciously like the factory reversed the spring and had it facing cone inboard towards the engine. This places the wide base of the spring against #2 steel and that was the way the wear pattern matched up.
You guys apparently have a copy of the manual, look at 6-16 installation drawing of the Bellville and then look at the picture below and tell me which way do you think they intended for the spring to point? I say small side outboard, wide base inboard.
Secondary question now that we are on this subject of small details making big differences, does it make any difference which way the spring seat is installed? We know the spring seat goes against #1 steel, then Bellville, then #2 steel but the book does not specify which direction the spring seat is oriented. The spring seat has a side with a rolled lip from stamping and a flat side, just like a stamped out washer or steel clutch plate, same thing. Does it matter if it's not in the book?
The reason I bring this up, everyone I've discussed it with says to orient steel plates with the smooth side facing in towards the engine and the flat side outboard. It's not specified in the book but everyone seems to beleive that is common practice.
This stuff is giving me a headache ......lol!
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