Kruz,
The nose has to be on the right side for a cct to begin slapping the slipper.
1. I can try to put it in top gear, rear wheel up in the air, I back torque the wheel so the cam chain slaps the cct plunger via slipper. Then, I front torque the rear wheel so the chain/slipper are at their loosest. With the chain now having all that tension on one side is the ex cam to crank, then the chain is slack at the rear, in theory. The spring either pops over the tooth...
2... Or it's back to a manual click.
3. And my man you will, load the rear wheel in top gear [to the point] of not moving the crank, but on the raggedge of moving it. So with the direction of rotation, no out of sync engine pulse to move the basket on a chug, the for every action, we have the ability to reverse in the slack, then make that noise. But with the chain that taught, no backlash of a slack, I'm going after one tooth 'click' out at a time. Start the engine until it either stops making noise, or you went too far, the whistle is on; out comes the housing so you manually ratchet the rod back in the body.
4. Then, the scenario goes something like this:
a. My rod is pushed back in all the way; I have the body bolted home.
b. I reversed the back wheel; with a handheld implement that landed thru the body hole; is up against the slipper; I move the rear wheel backwards; feel the slipper back out the implement; I kept the slipper taught so the chain will not ride up a tooth at the intake cam's sprocket; I stop enough so there is just a beginning of taught to the rear chain rung.
c. The body goes back in; I take my nail and push the ratcheted rod out so it hits the slipper and I stop.
d. I then turn the rear wheel in the drive direction: this tightens the front chain rung; loosens the rear; my nail goes back into the rod; I push to see if it will 'click' one more time to take that 'safety slack' out.
See how my push up to the slipper has a way to go? Until I understand about that singing of the slipper being too tight; I start all over again.
We see the move to click that slipper quiet in the chain tightening sequence?
I am imagining moving that plunger when the engine runs is a no-no. Why? The engine is pulsing that slipper on the fire offs. To push the rod back out and rat-tat-tat over the surface of the tooth layout, meaning, it will happen so fast, the ratchet will not have the time to lock down again, you forcing that rod forward at the same time. Static is your only way out so as not to shave those peaks off the teeth [and ratchet too remember: that rub your hands theory] while running.
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