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Driveshaft Phasing?

 
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oilhead110



Joined: 12 Sep 2008
Posts: 18
Location: Iowa

PostPosted: Sun Feb 01, 2009 12:09 pm    Post subject: Driveshaft Phasing? Reply with quote

I understand the driveshaft phasing and I have looked at 3 K100RS shafts including a new one at the dealer and none were perfectly phased. All were off perfect alignment by about one tooth. Is this acceptable?

Thanks

Dale C.
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K11Martin
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Joined: 22 Jul 2008
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PostPosted: Sun Feb 01, 2009 1:21 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

The importance of driveshaft phasing on a K1100 is an urtban myth...'The Emporer's new clothes' for the new Millennium!

Don't get sucked in. Driveshaft joints are 'universal', which means they work equally well in all planes.
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kioolt
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PostPosted: Sun Feb 01, 2009 5:42 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Phasing is important on the two u-joint K bikes. Take a look at this thread for more information.

http://www.advrider.com/forums/showthread.php?t=122909&highlight=phase+driveshaft
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Flying Duck
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PostPosted: Sun Feb 01, 2009 7:06 pm    Post subject: Re: Driveshaft Phasing? Reply with quote

oilhead110 wrote:
I understand the driveshaft phasing and I have looked at 3 K100RS shafts including a new one at the dealer and none were perfectly phased. All were off perfect alignment by about one tooth. Is this acceptable?

Thanks

Dale C.


Don't you mean half a tooth? (I have one in my basement.)
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K11Martin
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PostPosted: Sun Feb 01, 2009 8:23 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

kioolt wrote:
Take a look at this thread for more information.

Sorry but just because someone else has been conned into believing it doesn't mean it's not still rubbish Smile

Dealerships don't do it, and it's not mentioned in any of the K11 manuals either.
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Tim (Midland Section)
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PostPosted: Sun Feb 01, 2009 8:37 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

There is truth in the speed change versus angle of drive, hence the need for "constant velocity joints" in front wheel & 4 wheel drive vehicles.
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mike toon
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PostPosted: Mon Feb 02, 2009 8:06 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Much has been written about phasing. Decide for yourself.

"However real care must be exercised when assembling a shaft which incorporates a slip joint. A frequent cause of driveline vibration is assembling a slip joint without ensuring the yokes are parallel. Ever one spline out can cause problems."

Link... http://www.roddingroundtable.com/tech/articles/driveline.html
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Flying Duck
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PostPosted: Tue Feb 03, 2009 7:52 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Dale:

I saw you posed this same question over at BMW-ST. I think the answer lies in this guy's response:

Quote:
First,, is the offsetting U-joint angles.. If the front U-joint is operating at 2° & the rear U-joint is operating a ½° angle then proper phasing probably has little meaning.. The reason you phase U-joints is to have one operating shaft angle (therefore mid shaft accel/decl per rev) offset the shaft’s second U-joint angle (decel/accel per rev).. If the joints operate at different angles then phasing is much less effective..

Secondly,, sometimes U-joint phasing is purposely skewed due to shaft angle offset in another plane (ie the lateral output centerline is different than the lateral input centerline).. This is usually due to engine or final drive offset from vehicle centerline for one reason or another.. Sometimes a mis-matching couple of degrees of U-joint phasing can remove a vibration or harmonic set up from lateral misalignment or lateral angular mis-alignment..

There is also the phasing issue under drive torque.. You really want the U-joint phasing closest under shaft loading at nominal drive loads.. In a rubber isolator type shaft the phasing can be skewed slightly so the U-joints match up to closer phasing under normal drive loads..


That guy seems to know his stuff.

1) Angle of the U-joints: The purpose of the paralever set-up is to keep the final drive parallel (more or less) to the ground so the front and rear U-joints on our bikes are (again, more or less) at the same angle. Thus, phasing on our bikes seems like it could have an impact from that perspective.

2) Rubber insulated drive shafts: If you take a look at our drive shafts you'll notice that the front half of the drive shaft is, in fact, rubber insulated. When the rubber is torqued under load it would put the U-joints in phase if properly assembled.

My conclusion from this information is that it DOES matter. And, since all of the drive shafts seem to have the exact same offset, it appears as though the drive shafts were not manufatutred willy-nilly and that the BMW design and manufacturing engineers did take U-joint phasing into consideration.

That it didn't make it into the maintenance documentation does not, out of hand, mean that drive shaft phasing doesn't matter. The design engineers are not the ones who author maintenance manuals so the fact that it's not mentioned in the maintenance documentation doesn't prove anything conclusively. As things go from design to manufacturing to assembly to maintenance it would be easy for a small, yet potentially important, detail such as this to get lost in the shuffle.

So it does seem to matter:

1) Vibration. From what the guy says above, it appears as though being out of phase can introduce vibration. Obviously as riders we want as smooth a ride as possible. (H-D excluded. Very Happy )

2) Wear and tear. If the U-joints are in phase then there's less vibration, a smoother transfer of power and less strain on both the U-joints and the rubber insulator. It could also reduce the strain on upstream and downstream power train components.

The final question is HOW MUCH does it matter? Got me.

I've had a few people contact me looking for drive shafts who were very specific about the dirve shaft having good rubber which indicates to me that's what failed on their bikes. Did those shafts fail due to improper phasing? No conclusive data but it does make one wonder.

In March I'm going to be pulling my RS apart to give it a spline lube. I got the bike with 25k and fairly complete service records so I have a high degree of confidence that things are as they were when the bike left the factory. I'll take a look at how the drive shaft was phased during assembly.

Whatever the case, when I reassemble the drive shaft, I'll be setting it up so that the half tooth gets compensated for in the phasing based on which way the rubber insulator is torqued under load. It certainly can't hurt.
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Last edited by Flying Duck on Tue Feb 03, 2009 8:17 am; edited 5 times in total
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Jim
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PostPosted: Tue Feb 03, 2009 8:01 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Damn, Drake - you are like, really lucid in the morning - and no typos, either. For a minute there, I thought that reply was a copy and paste... Shocked
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Flying Duck
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PostPosted: Tue Feb 03, 2009 8:10 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Bite me ! Razz (I did have to go back and make a few edits. Very Happy )

My perspective on forum typos: I never took typing lessons and I think faster than I type. And I"m just posting on the Internets, not authoring a thesis.

(In real life I'm a spelling and grammar Nazi of the worst kind. Just ask anyone who has worked for me about the red pen I carry.)
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86 K75C w/paralever, hi perf cams,TURBO!
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91 K1
86 custom K100
14 WR250R
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Flying Duck
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PostPosted: Tue Feb 03, 2009 8:26 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Another interesting thing is that one of the "flaws" of the prior monolever setup was that it would eventually cause the final drive splines to fail - usually around 100k on K bikes. I read a write-up on the physics of this (by Eilenberger or Anton I think) some time ago . I don't remember the details but it made sense when I read it.

In addition to the performance benefits of the paralever, I suspect that the BMW engineers also wanted to design something more durable so they probably put quite a bit of thought into the mechanics of the paralever setup.

(It's too bad they stopped caring about durability and started building crappy final drives on the later bikes. Rolling Eyes )
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93 LT (x2)
94 RS
86-97 K75F(K75/100/1100 Frankenbrick)
86 K75C w/paralever, hi perf cams,TURBO!
91 & 92 K75Ss
91 K1
86 custom K100
14 WR250R
IBA #17739 (SS1K, BBG, 50CC)
Buy parts HERE
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gpzoduibh
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PostPosted: Wed Feb 04, 2009 2:57 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

"(It's too bad they stopped caring about durability and started building crappy final drives on the later bikes. )"

Just wondereing what you mean Drake are their ones to avoid from particular years ?
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Flying Duck
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PostPosted: Wed Feb 04, 2009 3:46 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

gpzoduibh wrote:
"(It's too bad they stopped caring about durability and started building crappy final drives on the later bikes. )"

Just wondereing what you mean Drake are their ones to avoid from particular years ?


Some of the later bikes had some disturbing FD failure rates. Not sure which as I don't pay much attention to the details of anything other than classicc K bikes.
_________________
93 LT (x2)
94 RS
86-97 K75F(K75/100/1100 Frankenbrick)
86 K75C w/paralever, hi perf cams,TURBO!
91 & 92 K75Ss
91 K1
86 custom K100
14 WR250R
IBA #17739 (SS1K, BBG, 50CC)
Buy parts HERE


Last edited by Flying Duck on Fri Mar 13, 2009 11:42 am; edited 1 time in total
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abreeze
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PostPosted: Sat Feb 21, 2009 1:29 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

The (design)failure with early mono shafts is that as the swingarm pivots the rear splines occilate on the shaft output splines. The key to long life was to lube the final splines frequently(every tire change). My friend with an idetical '87 like mine had a rear failure at 60k, and wasnt aware of the splines ever being lubed..
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Sonu
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PostPosted: Sat May 16, 2009 11:16 pm    Post subject: May 2009 update Reply with quote

Paul Glaves has a well written article in BMW Owners News May 2009 issue.

Here is a quote
"It is my carefully considered opinion that whether or not the drive-shaft U joints are properly phased is a key factor in how long the U joints last."

Here are instructions from the same article on how to arrange U joints
1) Front U joint driving yoke (attached to the transmission) - horizontal
2) Front U joint driven yoke - will be vertical
3) Rear U joint driving yoke - slide splines together so this yoke is vertical
4) Rear U joint driven yoke (attached to the final drive) - will be horizontal

Sanjiv
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