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Missing second gear - is it me or the bike.

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Andy_Pagin
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PostPosted: 10:45 - 18 Apr 2012    Post subject: Missing second gear - is it me or the bike. Reply with quote

Ok, I've had the YBR a couple of weeks now (on a scooter for the past year), but having problems changing up to second.

Every now and then I get neutral instead of second. At first I assumed it was me getting used to the gears, now I'm not so sure, so this morning I made a point of 'exaggerating' the gear change, jamming the clutch into the grip, pushing the throttle off and toeing up good & hard, but still I occasionally miss second. Doesn't seem to matter how I was revving in first and it only does it occasionally. When it does happen I just push the gear lever up again and it always engages ok.

So, am I doing something wrong or should I get the gearbox checked out?
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Pie-Roe
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PostPosted: 10:57 - 18 Apr 2012    Post subject: Reply with quote

Don't know what the linkage is like on a YBR but it's worth making sure the pinch on the gearbox splines is done up tightly, and theres no loose bolts in any of the linkage. Also, if you try and consciously push your heel down while changing up it'll help.

I had to do that on a bike I bought that had a broken hangar, never miss a gear now.
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Tomzo47
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PostPosted: 11:09 - 18 Apr 2012    Post subject: Reply with quote

my old YBR did occasionally go into neutral rather than second, you just have to give it a good boot. I noticed mine did it more and more often until I changed the oil, when was the last oil change?
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Ericck
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PostPosted: 11:22 - 18 Apr 2012    Post subject: Reply with quote

Hey could be the bike but IMHO more likely just needs getting used to, especially as it goes in fine after when you do miss it. When I went from the bandit to a cbr last year, I kept missing second gear when coming from first, for the first few weeks at least and then it was fine and I have rode many different bikes over many years Smile

As you have already said, be a bit more deliberate about it.

Although I have known people to change the position of the gear lever to suit their big or small feet.
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yen_powell
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PostPosted: 11:52 - 18 Apr 2012    Post subject: Reply with quote

Too much play in the clutch cable makes this happen. Play increases as the engine heats up and the cable expands. Too much slop and changing up to second is a bit hit and miss.
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Alpha-9
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PostPosted: 12:01 - 18 Apr 2012    Post subject: Reply with quote

YBR has always been a bit funny about neutral for me too, but not to that extent.

Yen_powell seems to know what he's talking about Thinking

And Ericck he already said he's tried exaggerating the gear changes and really booting it up but it's still the same.

How about changing up without the clutch? Wink I'm sure it wont do the gearbox any favours but...debug

Err, try what the guys above said Laughing oil!
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Kal
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PostPosted: 13:36 - 18 Apr 2012    Post subject: Reply with quote

Sometimes it just happens and you lern hw to ride around it.

Worth checking the oil though. If its done more than 20K or the oil isn't a lovely see through consistancy then you may just need an oil change.
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P.
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PostPosted: 14:40 - 18 Apr 2012    Post subject: Reply with quote

Tried 1>2nd without the clutch?
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Teflon-Mike
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PostPosted: 14:58 - 18 Apr 2012    Post subject: Reply with quote

Seem to recall you are a high-mile tiddler..... but then, tiddlers live hard lives.

Yes, often change from 1st to 2nd is a little more nadgery on many gear-boxes, but its also the one most made, so where when you strip an engine you see most 'wear' on the shift pawl, so they can get less precice with wear and tear.

BUT, not helping it will be drive line snatch, low gears theres a lot of 'pitch' between chifts as you roll off and back on again, and the amount of reduction in the gearbox means that there is a lot more 'movement' needed to see the load taken off the cogs and for them to actually 'un-mesh'.

Feature of bike engines, unlike cars, is that the engagement is often on 'Dogs' rather than the teeth of the gears.

In a car gearbox, you usually slide teh actual cogs aloing teh shaft to 'mesh' with each other.

Say you have 36 teeth on a cog, it only has to rotate 10 degrees to 'mesh' with its partner, so +/- 5 degrees and it will slot in... and its helped by cones, that get the two gears spinning at the same speed before hand, so the cog only has to be shifted 5 degrees max one way or other to slide in...

On a BIKE gear-box, you have what are called Dog-Clutches between the cogs. The cogs themselves are arranged so that they are in 'constant mesh' with thier partner, and can spin on the shaft, and rather than actually shift one gear onto mesh with another, you shift a 'boss' along the shaft that had 'dogs' of like casle battlement 'bumps' that slot into other bumps or holes in the side of the gear.

There might only be two, or four lumps between a boss and a cog, so instead of 36 possible engagement points, they only have tow, for or six, and the 'Dogs' have to rotate maybe +/- 22.5 degrees to find an engagement point.

Make sense? TL;DR... bike gear-boxes are more sensitive to being 'unloaded' and need more 'motion' in the shafts to swap gears!

So, first checks:

1/ Chain slack, & condition.

If you have too much 'slack' in the chain, when you throttle off and de-clutch, you take load off the top run of the chain 'driving' the wheel, and ALL the slack has to be gathered up from the bottom run, before the back wheel starts spinning the shafts in the gear-box to help line up these 'dogs' as you shift.

If the chain is significantly worn, then it will magnify the 'slack' in the same way, as there is more free play in the points of each link.

Careful chain adjustment & maintenance can SERIOUSELY improve 'shift' precision.

2/ Cush-Drive Rubbers
Pretty sure your bike has conventional 'paddle' type cush drive. Rear wheel hub has a drum on the sprocket side, with four, five or possibly six radial webs between the axle boss and the drum. In these sut some rubber blocks, often bridged over the webbs, and slightly longer on the driven side. THEN you have a sprocket carrier, that has the sprocket on one side, and a boss in the middle for the axle, then on the inside, engaging in the wheel, a big 'lugg' or 'paddle' that sits between the rubber blocks. When the sprocket is turned by the chain, the paddles bear on the rubber blocks, which in turn bear on the webs in the drum, and transfer the force to turn the wheel.... BUT there is 'complience' in the blocks so that they can 'squash' and take up load progressively and take any harsh 'snatch' in the drive line.

With age, these blocks can go hard, and will tend to shrink slightly, and hard use can see them 'hammered' to that they are squashed even more, opening up a big gap for the paddle to flop around in.

Again, that gap has to be taken up as the wheel goes from being driven by the transmission under load, to driving the transmission during a gear-change, and if there is a lot of slop in the chush drive, it will make the change more sloppy and less precice.

Cheap trick I have utilised many many times is to 'shim' worn cush drives with a little aluminium plate, or some thick plastic cut from a cracked stak-a-box or old emulsion bucket, kind of thing.

"What you done to my Gear-Box" said J.M. when I did it to his CBR... Easy-Duz was similarly impressed by the difference!

Its a cheap trick, but amazing difference. Long term 'proper' fix is new cush-drive rubbers, which aren't ALL that expensive, but a bit of old plastic is a good get-you-by improvised repair until they arrive!

Otherwise.... SMOOTH SHIFTING, lightweights need more gear changing, and clumsy newby changes cause lots of pitching and diving and wobbling, learning to ride smoothly is key, and as you do, changes will improve...

But WHILE you are mastering this.... that chain and cush drive will be getting hammered..... but so too will the front fork oil and rear dampers.... soaking up the 'lurch'.

Dampers are often sealed for life, and if not completely shot, probably not a lot you can do about them.... but front fork oil DONT last for ever, and always worth changing about once a year along with brake fluid.

Maybe using slightly heavier fork oil could be an idea, but NEW fork oil will offer more damping effect than old sheared to shit, emulsified by condensation old oil, and again, take out some of the load changes as you shift.

Other maintenence: clutch cable, the clutch, the dogs inside the box, and any 'links' between shift lever and selector shaft, engine oil.

A new clutch cable is always a good thing to have; old ones you are often using the first bit of lever travel to take up the strain on the cable, and that can give an aplication 'lag' that is almost un-notioceable until you remove it, fitting a new cable.

Shift lever. lot of commuters have the shift lever direct on the selector shaft, which is as 'direct' as it can be. But more and more often they are 'remote' and connected by a ball-joint linkage.

Wear in the remove pivot for teh shift lever makes the change imprecice, then any slop on the linkage between shift lever and selector shaft.

A new lever & links is often a great investment, though cleaning, oiling and adjusting can make a big difference.

And ACTUALLY adjusting the lever possition to the most comfortable 'rest' possition can be a big boon. Have you ever adjusted the lever angle to suit your 'seat'?

Shifting the lever down a notch, so you dont have to lift your foot as much can make a REALLY big difference.

Lifting your toe is the more 'unnatural' action, and shift from 1st to 2nd often takes a tad more travel, and JUST getting that bit more movement from less toe angle can make a very big difference.

Then you are down to correct clutch adjustment, and oil in the gear-box. Not a lot you can do about wear on the selector pawl or dogs, withgout stripping the engine down, and unless its an ex school CBT bike, its not USUAL to see severe wear of damage on these parts unless the bike is REALLY abused.

SO.... bit of maintenance, bit of adjustment. bit of practice.... ought to sort itself out.
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Andy_Pagin
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PostPosted: 15:36 - 18 Apr 2012    Post subject: Reply with quote

Thanks Tef,

I just had a look at the sprocket, if I twist it (with the back wheel held steady) I can move it back & forth a few degrees, does that sound right?

I'll check the chain slack tonight.

Btw, it's a 2008 year YBR with 8,800 miles on the clock.
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Yamaha Vity -> YBR125 -> FZS600 Fazer -> FZ1-S Fazer
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Teflon-Mike
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PostPosted: 16:11 - 18 Apr 2012    Post subject: Reply with quote

Andy_Pagin wrote:
I just had a look at the sprocket, if I twist it (with the back wheel held steady) I can move it back & forth a few degrees, does that sound right?

That sounds about right.... for a typically neglected cush drive.... yes Laughing

Ought to have NO 'free' play in it. You ought to feel it pressing against the rubber!

NAILED!

Get the wheel out and find 'something' to pack it out with.... oil, and adjust chain... SEE how much better it feels... ORDER new cush drive rubbers!

Also have a look at your gear lever position, & linkage (if there is one) {For all I reccomend YBR's, I DONT actually know the mechanical details very well, if at all!}

Do some remedial & preventative maintenence!

They are a 'low' maintenece bike, not a NO maintenence bike, and this sort of thing is VERY typical, of the sort of 'negelect' newbie bikes suffer, from shear ignorance, that 'user-maintenence' is more than merely changing the oil from time to time!

Treat the bike to a 'Spring' fettling; look at that clutch cable & adjustment; Flush the front brake fluid; clean the caliper; give it some new engine oil, check the back brake AND the lever, put some oil on things like the gear lever pivot, side-stand, main-stand pivots, grease some bushes, like the swing arm ones; change the fork oil...

Be AMAZED how differently the bike will ride!
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Pete.
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PostPosted: 17:33 - 18 Apr 2012    Post subject: Reply with quote

yen_powell wrote:
...the engine heats up and the cable expands...


Load of rubbish I'm afraid.
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Ericck
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PostPosted: 18:22 - 18 Apr 2012    Post subject: Reply with quote

Alpha-9 wrote:

Yen_powell seems to know what he's talking about Thinking


Laughing
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Previous Bikes: Yamaha FS1E, Mobylette Moped Thingy, Suzuki GS125, Kawasaki Zephyr 550, Kawasaki Zephyr 750, Kawasaki ER500, Suzuki Bandit 600, Honda CBR600F, Triumph Street Triple 675, Suzuki V Strom 650, Suzuki Bandit 1200, Suzuki SV650N, Honda CB500F.
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Andy_Pagin
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PostPosted: 08:54 - 19 Apr 2012    Post subject: Reply with quote

Presumably it's an "unbolt everything, refitting is the same procedure in reverse" job. I've downloaded the workshop manual and it looks easy enough.
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FirebladeRuss
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PostPosted: 12:32 - 19 Apr 2012    Post subject: Reply with quote

Nice post on the gearing situation Mike! Thumbs Up

The cush drive on my GZ was a bit clapped out, but nevertheless, a new chain and sprocket made the bike feel so much nicer.
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Beelzebob
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PostPosted: 23:07 - 23 Apr 2012    Post subject: Reply with quote

Teflon-Mike wrote:
pages of gearboxy stuff

Make sense? TL;DR... bike gear-boxes are more sensitive to being 'unloaded' and need more 'motion' in the shafts to swap gears!

more pages of gearboxy stuff


I'd have thought you'd know by now to put the TL;DR at the END... not hidden in the middle Shocked

Found that I got neutral a few times on 1-2 on the YBR but probably put it down to me being a nub rather than the bike.
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Teflon-Mike
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PostPosted: 04:37 - 24 Apr 2012    Post subject: Reply with quote

_Iain_ wrote:
a VERY useful post thats saved me a significant chunk of money! Karma Thumbs Up


Yup, now read the REST of the post! Shimming the rubbers is a 'get-me-by' fix and not a permenant cure.

THESE are what you need to do the job properly:-
[ur=https://www.wemoto.com/bikes/yamaha/ybr_125_carburetor/07-08/picture/cush_drive_rubber_-_set/]https://images.wemoto.com/full/CUSH_DRIVE/10026102.jpg[/url]
We-Moto, £8.06 the set.... its not SUCH a lot of money to have saved.
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Sload
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PostPosted: 06:39 - 24 Apr 2012    Post subject: Reply with quote

Nice Tef, they look the same principal as the coupling rubbers we fit at work between drives & boxes. Didnt know bikes had them Thumbs Up
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Andy_Pagin
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PostPosted: 09:56 - 25 Apr 2012    Post subject: Reply with quote

I've ordered the new cush dampers, meanwhile I tightened the chain back to about 20mm free play from the 70MM slack it had Shocked

That alone has improved the ride no end, also I'm being a bit more aggressive with the gear stick, I reckon a lot of the 2nd gear misses were just me pussy footing and tapping into N
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sheriffjonny
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PostPosted: 12:55 - 30 Apr 2012    Post subject: Reply with quote

Andy_Pagin wrote:
also I'm being a bit more aggressive with the gear stick, I reckon a lot of the 2nd gear misses were just me pussy footing and tapping into N


Glad you said that first!!! I too do the same thing on my cbf125, often after coming back down through the gears. After you go from 1st to second all other gear changes are much slicker(closer), so when you come back to first and then start going back up again, you may naturally be set into the higher gear changes in your mind, which only need a slight movement. Well this is my explanation for me doing it anyway, just got to remember where I am in my gears!!
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Alpha-9
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PostPosted: 13:15 - 30 Apr 2012    Post subject: Reply with quote

So after all that you were just being a pussy foot
Did the thrush not give it away?
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tbourner
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PostPosted: 13:32 - 30 Apr 2012    Post subject: Reply with quote

I've been hitting neutral a lot as well, annoyingly I then stop and spend 2 mins going from 1st to 2nd and back cos I can't get it into neutral!! Evil or Very Mad
Will have a check over it, planning an oil change if I get 30 mins without rain tomorrow!
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