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shane BBoys wrote:Hi.
As it is guess time does it throw as suggested the oil onto the front sprocket and thus oil the chain?
Cheers Shane
solostax wrote:The component found in the Lambretta engine identified as an “Oil Thrower” is indeed a misnomer.It’s use to describe a dished type washer harks back to the Italian middle ages where the practice of refining olive oil involved employing a circular pan with a recessed groove to separate the different densities when crushing the virgin olives.After running off the purer oil in the outer section the remaining was “Thrown” into the “ordinary “ container for general cooking.
The fact that the “Oil Thrower” shape was incorporated in the construction of Lambretta engines was due to a batch of washers incorrectly formed by an outside contractor (also tasked with machining the splines on the kick start pedal pinion)
Anyone else got a better explanation?.![]()
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Andy B.L.C. wrote:While you're on it pray ask for an answer to the reason for positioning the drive side oil seal on the 'wrong' side of the engine casing & the user friendly standard exhaust fixings... In breathless anticipation...
solostax wrote:Andy B.L.C. wrote:While you're on it pray ask for an answer to the reason for positioning the drive side oil seal on the 'wrong' side of the engine casing & the user friendly standard exhaust fixings... In breathless anticipation...
Dear Andy B.L.C , many have pondered why with the cylinder cowling in place the exhaust nuts, or at least one of them, are difficult to access.Also that vital oil seal that necessitates a full strip down to remedy.
The reason is not that the Italian design engineers had not foreseen the problem arising from amateur owners attempting home repairs ,rather that the original engine layout and concept was conceived by a collaboration between Innocenti and the then famous French engineering consultants Messrs Maquis De Sade & Co., who insisted on certain design features.This little known fact also goes some way to answer the conundrums revealed on taking off the top headset thereby revealing that fantastic sexy snake’s nest of wiring /cables.
However as the passing of time, and therefore a passing of knowledgeable Lambretta owners, threatened the viability of home repairs a Saint Martin of the Round table together with other expert bold knights saw fit to debunk the mysteries of the Lambretta by publishing a bible that singled out most of the perverse tortures likely to be encountered.By way of “Tips” and practical advice in conjunction with LCGB the relative newcomer to the world of Lambretta is now empowered to overcome.![]()
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Hat wrote:solostax wrote:Andy B.L.C. wrote:While you're on it pray ask for an answer to the reason for positioning the drive side oil seal on the 'wrong' side of the engine casing & the user friendly standard exhaust fixings... In breathless anticipation...
Dear Andy B.L.C , many have pondered why with the cylinder cowling in place the exhaust nuts, or at least one of them, are difficult to access.Also that vital oil seal that necessitates a full strip down to remedy.
The reason is not that the Italian design engineers had not foreseen the problem arising from amateur owners attempting home repairs ,rather that the original engine layout and concept was conceived by a collaboration between Innocenti and the then famous French engineering consultants Messrs Maquis De Sade & Co., who insisted on certain design features.This little known fact also goes some way to answer the conundrums revealed on taking off the top headset thereby revealing that fantastic sexy snake’s nest of wiring /cables.
However as the passing of time, and therefore a passing of knowledgeable Lambretta owners, threatened the viability of home repairs a Saint Martin of the Round table together with other expert bold knights saw fit to debunk the mysteries of the Lambretta by publishing a bible that singled out most of the perverse tortures likely to be encountered.By way of “Tips” and practical advice in conjunction with LCGB the relative newcomer to the world of Lambretta is now empowered to overcome.![]()
![]()
The Marquis was also briefly employed by Vespa to design the headset on their early models, ensuring that the single point of access via the speedo hole was just too small for an adult's hand to fit inside
coaster wrote:Re to the original question, I'd always thought it was to direct oil dripping down from the chain into the main bearing in other words throwing oil Into raher than away from the bearing. I think the webs on the inside of the case are to provide stiffness rather than cooling, as innocenti provide transmission oil cooling fins along the underside of the crankcase where they are in the cool airflow.
Not as interesting as some off the explanations above Im afraid![]()
coaster wrote:Re to the original question, I'd always thought it was to direct oil dripping down from the chain into the main bearing in other words throwing oil Into raher than away from the bearing. I think the webs on the inside of the case are to provide stiffness rather than cooling, as innocenti provide transmission oil cooling fins along the underside of the crankcase where they are in the cool airflow.
Not as interesting as some off the explanations above Im afraid![]()
Warkton Tornado No.1 wrote:
The other, overlooked function is the distribution of oil to the very large surface area of the crankcase & cover with it's mass of ribs that encourage cooling of the oil via heat dissipation as well as adding strengthening to the castings themselves.
Unlike water, oil is not very good @ shedding heat, so the more contact it has with the cooler inside parts of the crankcase, the better.
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