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Yes, but you have to remove the camshaft to get enough play in the chain to lift crank
You could try Wynns Stop Leak, it’s supposed to revitalise seals. Worth a try for about a tenner.It slowed my output shaft leak on my 650.
Remove the points plate and you can see the crank seal, as TSD has said it's normally a split the cases job to replace, that's because it's lipped on it's outer edge. First off you need to make sure it's that that is leaking, it could be the crankcase sealing itself. You could possibly get away with removing the seal, if it is that, and removing the lip off a new seal and driving it into place, it may work and for the cost of a new seal it may be worth trying first. However that's not without it's risks, the seal is very close to the crank shells and if you hit those you're in a lot of trouble. It has been done though.
Quote from: Oddjob on February 16, 2025, 03:52:54 PMRemove the points plate and you can see the crank seal, as TSD has said it's normally a split the cases job to replace, that's because it's lipped on it's outer edge. First off you need to make sure it's that that is leaking, it could be the crankcase sealing itself. You could possibly get away with removing the seal, if it is that, and removing the lip off a new seal and driving it into place, it may work and for the cost of a new seal it may be worth trying first. However that's not without it's risks, the seal is very close to the crank shells and if you hit those you're in a lot of trouble. It has been done though.Thought we had a thread on this in the anals of forum. Recall as a successful replacement in situ, but could be wrong