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earlfor said:I think youre correct Don. Since the 3" ignition assembly mount bolt is threaded into the end of the crankshaft, it is extremely doubtful that the crank could be bent in a low speed mishap. Crankshafts are hardened, supported in bearings and have a much larger cross section than the bolt. Its a matter of form factor and stress load capability. The bolt will not be as hard as the crank and the form factor will/should guarantee that it will either bend or break before the crankshaft will deform. The bolt should be intentionally engineered to sheer or deflect before damaging the crank. I would be very surprised if the crank was bent.
Earl
Don Lobacz said:You need to remove everything that is under the cover, set up a dial indicator on the crank end (there is not very much that sticks out of the cases) and check for runout while spinning the motor by hand (put it on the centerstand, remove the spark plugs, put it in 5th gear and spin the back tire in its normal direction). I don't think a low speed crash could easily bend the crank. Were you able to ride the bike home after the crash?
I'm with Don and Earl on this...if it hit hard enough to bend the crank, you would have seen a lot more damage to other parts of the bike. I am 99.99% positive it is only in the ingition trigger part that attaches to the crank. If the crank is bent it would be only the right-hand crankshaft (Suzuki part # 12220-49202). If any more is bent, then there is probably extensive damage to the cases and the engine would be a total write-off. I would be amazed if anything else other than the bolt holding the advance assembly were bent (besides the cover, which must be a total loss).
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