As I've said, probably more than once, the primary chain cover and it's associated parts - the clutch dome and dynamo chain cover - have a number of problems mostly associated with splits and broken welds. Nothing fundamental is missing apart from a couple of brackets and there's nothing we can't fix.
You've already seen that I've made a start on the clutch dome in a previous post so today we are going to start on the chain cover proper.
The chain cover supports the forward end of the rear chain guard and the bracket for this has cracked and been repaired with a piece of thick sheet and several ugly rivets. Fortunately it has been fixed in more or less the right place:
What we will do, to start with, is retain it in this correct position with a short weld:
Next we will remove the rivets and start to reshape the bent and twisted metal. This is a simple as using a centre bunch and a series of progressively increasing twisted drills until the rivet head comes off leaving the stem still in the hole, when the part will come off with a little tweaking and no damage.
With that lower bracket removed we can dress out the distortion in the chain cover .
The next job is to make a new bracket in the style of the existing brackets at the front end of the chain cover. In common with those brackets this is cut from 2 mm thick steel sheet on the bandsaw, linisher, and pillar drill. Here it is in position for a trial fit:
It is supposed to fit inside the curve of the chain cover and be retained by two spot welds, the holes for which are still there. This is quite a weak design and I'm not at all surprised at the welds failed.
The new bracket needs a bit of bending to get it to fit properly at both ends.
That's it for this part of the repair. What you can't see is that I have made a short weld along the edge of the clutch aperture to retain the outboard edge of the bracket.
The last bit of this job is a split along the bottom edge which has opened out probably due to the stresses remaining in the part after it was pressed to shape. I've used three clamps to draw this together again for tacking:
This is not the most tidy job, but I realise now I had the current too low. I try to keep it down to avoid blowing through the thin metal but you need it high enough to make the metal flow! I laid too much filler rod onto this to make sure I wasn't burning holes.
It will grind out ok, and the penetration is perfect.
Getting near the end now - two holes to fill. A thin copper backing lets you puddle in some filler rod:
I've not taken a picture, but with a copper backing there is virtually no dressing to do on the back of this weld.
Back to the rear chain guard mount again, with the rivets removed and the holes plugged we can just weld up the seam along the edge of the main primary chain guard:
This is a tiny little autogenous butt weld with a little bit of filler rod part way along.
That will do.
Quite a bit of cleanup though - we will do that tomorrow.
I'm calling this done.