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John Deeley wrote:I've had a lot of PM replies thanks, all very helpful. The 66mm wossner seems well thought of with a standard crank.
I had a Taffspeed TS1 20 odd years ago using a DT 175 piston and 115 Yamaha rod, it was a very smooth engine.
The cylinder is being re-plated so they'll match it to suit.
coaster wrote:John Deeley wrote:I've had a lot of PM replies thanks, all very helpful. The 66mm wossner seems well thought of with a standard crank.
I had a Taffspeed TS1 20 odd years ago using a DT 175 piston and 115 Yamaha rod, it was a very smooth engine.
The cylinder is being re-plated so they'll match it to suit.
Ron Moss sells decent pistons to suit TS1' I bought one from him a few years ago, Matica I think which gave good service. I notice he's got them on sale at the moment
Fast n Furious wrote:I have a TS1/200 which uses a re-pegged 2mm oversize Yamaha Banshee Piston on a 110 yammy rod (36mm comp height) which now has near 7000 trouble free miles on it and no ring changes yet.
Re-pegging pistons is quite feasible if its done right.
ULC Soulagent wrote:coaster wrote:John Deeley wrote:I've had a lot of PM replies thanks, all very helpful. The 66mm wossner seems well thought of with a standard crank.
I had a Taffspeed TS1 20 odd years ago using a DT 175 piston and 115 Yamaha rod, it was a very smooth engine.
The cylinder is being re-plated so they'll match it to suit.
Ron Moss sells decent pistons to suit TS1' I bought one from him a few years ago, Matica I think which gave good service. I notice he's got them on sale at the moment
Is that not for the 225 kit Coaster?
Fella looking for 200 66mm version
Warkton Tornado No.1 wrote:Fast n Furious wrote:I have a TS1/200 which uses a re-pegged 2mm oversize Yamaha Banshee Piston on a 110 yammy rod (36mm comp height) which now has near 7000 trouble free miles on it and no ring changes yet.
Re-pegging pistons is quite feasible if its done right.
I agree that re-pegging is fine. I fit a sliver of alloy, tapered to fit the ring groove in the area that I want the new peg to be prior to drilling. For pegs, often a needle from a bearing will suit. The only pegs I've had fail were the brass type in the OEM Honda pistons.
The filing down of the original peg then takes an age. If only spark eroders were cheaply available....
Fast n Furious wrote:
Yep... that's how I do it. Needle rollers are perfect.
I actually use an end mill bit to drill the new peg hole on a milling machine to discount the possibilities of drilling off-centre. Then, very carefully grind out he old pin with my trusty Dremmel.
rossclark wrote:Could someone say what the process of turning an old bearing race pin into a ring peg is, please?
My instinct says
drill a hole
Insert peg
But I suspect I missed a couple of things...
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