by Warkton Tornado No.1 » Wed May 17, 2017 10:02 pm
I used to do what rossclark says & may do again! But......When I was using the CamLam race clutches, the corks were so thin that I feared that removing anything between the pads might affect the adhesion/bonding of the cork to their plates. So I stopped doing so.(In any case, they’d fragment so easily, I gave them up for a modified motorcycle clutch, but that’s another story)
You’d think that clearing the slots as much as possible would help the clutch grip, wouldn’t you? It’s logical, isn’t it?
Just to add to the (my) confusion, Bantam racers now seem to use ‘steel on steel’ apparently with great success:
“Most race Bantams now run on an all steel clutch made and hardened from standard stripped friction plates and the steel plates left soft and bored out a little”
In other words, no slots @ all!
That’s with only three gears (in the majority of cases) requiring an enormously high first to be slipped like a b@st@rd to pull away to obtain anything like a close ratio gearbox!
I’m not contradicting any advice on this issue, but it really does make you wonder how instrumental the slots are, doesn’t it?