If I was harley I would get rid of the hydraulic clutch and go back to the old way, my 2016 triglide had the hydraulic and I didn't think it was any easier pulling in than my 2002 road king or my 1997 softail, seems like the ones having trouble are the hydraulic one's and not all of them are doing it, that is why no recall, basically I think they need a recall on this, harley is playing dumb on this and don't want to admit they screwed up their design, this is my take on it, not to sure how many harley's they are selling because of this, dealers seem to have quite a few in inventory and the 2019's are coming out. The word gets out about this and most people will think twice about a harley.
All for now Trampas
Yes. look here also
https://www.georges-garage.com/produ...door-puller-2/
Nuff Said," Were Burnin Daylight, Lets Ride"(Sober 37 years)
Current ride : 2021 FREEWHEELER M8, oldest ride 1960 FL
Thanks Jack.
2017 Harley Davidson Freewheeler (107 cu.in. vivid black).
They say Baker has a fix for the oil migration problem. Jack & others, can you please read & respond, as I'm not a tranny tech.
1. Baker firmly believes that their Hydraulic Side Cover design solves the M8 fluid transfer problem
2. The M8 Hydraulic Side Cover is in Production, but not available to order yet. The covers are in final machining and still need to be chromed. Expect them to be available to order in about a month.
3. The specs on the Baker website for the 06-17 Hydraulic Cover are for the Twin Cam Cover -- not the M8.
4. The Piston size in the Stock H-D M8 and new M8 Baker Hydraulic Cover are the same size and slightly smaller than on the Twin Cam (don't know why H-D reduced the piston size for the M8).
5. The big difference between the H-D cover and the Baker cover is that the H-D cover has a piston stop as part of the casting. The stop limits the piston travel so it can't be pushed out of the bore, however this stop extends beyond the piston and literally surrounds the nut on the tranny door -- this creates a pocket that limits the movement of tranny fluid which gets pressurized and pushed past the clutch rod every time the clutch is actuated. The Baker design doesn't have a piston stop -- the piston could theoretically be pushed out of the bore, but in reality is limited by the clutch rod travel, and finally it would hit the tranny nut before leaving the bore. In other words the Baker design leaves the Tranny nut completely unshrouded.
I also found this:
Looking at the 2019 parts book, they have changed the secondary actuator (37200131B) , and added the oil deflector (36300026), to all models with hydraulic clutches - so I guess that is their "fix".
2017 Harley Davidson Freewheeler (107 cu.in. vivid black).
I also found this on the same forum & if true, this explains why some have the problem & some don't .
Apparently, HD was using multiple vendors for the same part & no one caught the differences.
I think I see whats going on with the oil transfer issue. A friend and I took off the tranny cover on a 2018 with this issue. What we saw was a huge size hole in the output shaft for the pushrod to go through. Don't see how tranny oil couldn't transfer. On others that I have taken apart the output shaft hole was a few thousands [ 10K's or less, guessing ] bigger then the pushrod. On this output shaft the hole was about 1/4 bigger then the pushrod. With some bikes doing it and some don't, I would think HD has more then one suppler for this part and this issue was not caught in the QC Dept.. The fix for this issue from HD is a sleeve type button that just pushes into the end of the output shaft to take up space, simple fix.
2017 Harley Davidson Freewheeler (107 cu.in. vivid black).
I think the Baker cover is going to fix this problem
I said it before, the HD tranny cover traps the fluid, It has 1 way to go and that is down the pushrod thru the hollow shaft
The Baker cover uses a different actuator piston less the machined stop that HD uses
This should clear the fluid to pass back down below the gears like it should
As far as the HD fix with the plastic button in the end of the push rod= another Epic failure on about all the bikes reported using it
OOOPS, Michael, HD should have known better with such a large hole ( the main shaft has always housed the push rod with out transfer) and using an inferior IMO size pushrod
HD blaming vendors ? Would not be surprised however the HD R and D department knew their set up would fail IMO Why does the MOCO outsmart itself all the time
The 6 speed is a very good tranny, leave it alone JMO
Nuff Said," Were Burnin Daylight, Lets Ride"(Sober 37 years)
Current ride : 2021 FREEWHEELER M8, oldest ride 1960 FL
If they were using different vendors & the output shaft holes in the pushrods are different, that would explain why some do it & some don't.
I agree with you on the 6 speed tranny, it's very nice.
2017 Harley Davidson Freewheeler (107 cu.in. vivid black).
I think you are onto something here
It would not surprise me with the vendors, once again you would think with the bikes HD has fixed @ dealerships they would check the mainshafts for sizing differences
I guess we are over thinking this one and should be glad ours are not doing the transfer YET Yes the 6 speed is a good unit, before it we were happy with a 5 speed
Nuff Said," Were Burnin Daylight, Lets Ride"(Sober 37 years)
Current ride : 2021 FREEWHEELER M8, oldest ride 1960 FL